The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Imran vows ‘whistleblo­wer’ law to fight corruption

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ISLAMABAD: Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan on Sunday promised a new law that will reward whistleblo­wers who help nab corrupt officials and politician­s.

Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-eInsaf party won the July election campaignin­g on an anti-corruption reformist agenda, and has blamed the country’s economic woes on the alleged corrupt practices of his predecesso­rs.

With Pakistan facing a balanceof-payments crisis, Khan said recovering that stolen wealth would help ease the burden on the country’s economy.

He has claimed that billions of dollars of public money have been stolen over the last few decades, much of it laundered out of the country.

“The law will invite countrymen to identify the corrupt and (whistleblo­wers will) get 20 per cent of the ill-gotten money and assets recovered from such people,” Khan told a press conference in the eastern city of Lahore.

The other 80 percent would be used to pay off Pakistan’s debts, he said. Khan did not give any further details, but said a draft of the law will be presented in parliament in the coming days, and will include protection­s for whistleblo­wers.

Pakistan’s budget deficit has climbed steadily over the last five years, and foreign currency reserves have declined.

The rupee has also been repeatedly devalued in the past year, fuelling inflation.

Islamabad is likely to seek a bailout from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, which has called on the new government to act fast to stabilise Pakistan’s teetering economy, warning growth will likely slow and inflation rise further.

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