The Pak Banker

Another anti-corruption crusader?

- M A Niazi

The arrest of Punjab Senior Minister Abdul Aleem Khan by the National Accountabi­lity Bureau shows the pitfalls of its accusation­means-guilt approach to guilt. It also shows the vulnerabil­ity of the PTI to corruption charges, because of the past deeds of ‘electables’.

Aleem Khan is the third high-profile victim from the PTI who has been forced from office because he has been accused of having assets beyond his known sources of income. He also owns an offshore company, and is being asked to explain where he got the funds for it. Also, his associatio­n with a housing society has been impugned, reflecting NAB’s continuing fascinatio­n with wrongdoing in housing or real-estate projects. It means that the present government’s Naya Pakistan Housing Scheme will be a high-risk propositio­n for everyone involved, and may well be the rope used to hang the Prime Minister himself.

It should not be forgotten that housing projects and real estate has made NAB order the arrest of National Assembly Leader of the Opposition Mian Shehbaz Sharif, former federal minister Kh Saad Rafiq and his brother Kh Salman, and now former ports and shipping minister Kamran Michel. While Mian Shehbaz was arrested over a public scheme (the Aashiyana Housing Scheme), and the Rafiq brothers over a private scheme, Michael’s arrest has been ordered over a combinatio­n.

He is accused of having received bribes to get plots allocated to certain people in the Karachi Port Trust housing society, which was under his control.

It is worth noting that while party Secretary-General Jehangir Tareen ended up disqualifi­ed by the Supreme Court because of flats in London, PM’s Adviser Babar Awan resigned after NAB filed a reference against him in the Nandipur power plant reference, for the legal advice he tendered as the Law Minister in the PPP Government which led to a delay in its constructi­on, and cost escalation.

Aleem Khan has been arrested over a housing scheme of which he was already secretary when he became a provincial minister under Ch Pervez Elahi. Like Awan, but unlike Tareen, he has been brought under the NAB spotlight for something he is sup- posed to have done when he was part of an earlier, non-PTI, government.

Both Awan and Aleem have been personally close to PTI chief Imran Khan, as has Tareen. The latter provided Imran the use of his personal plane over the years. Awan was his counsel in numerous cases. Aleem and Tareen were known as Imran’s ATMs, and there was a photograph of the three in a plane cabin, on their 2017 trip together to the UK, that became quite famous on the social media.

Aleem is the type Imran finds admirable, being a member of the diaspora who had returned, having made his pile. However, Aleem became really wealthy after getting into the real estate market. His having been in the Pervez Cabinet means that he has links to the same sort of people Imran is linked to. As a matter of fact, Jehangir Tareen is even more directly linked, for he was a Punjab adviser on agricultur­e in the Musharraf years; a post he had first enjoyed under Mian Shehbaz Sharif in his first tenure.

Aleem Khan’s resignatio­n may be an exit, or else it may be a hiatus meant to allow a fair investigat­ion, and to clear him, in which case he will be back. It might be remembered that Punjab Law Minister Rana Sanaullah had resigned over the Model Town killings, but had returned after being cleared. Aleem Khan may find himself coming up against the PTI culture, in which accusation is proof. Even if he is released by NAB, or acquitted by an accountabi­lity court, he might not find it as easy to make a comeback to the Cabinet.

Aleem had enjoyed a particular­ly powerful position. One sign of this was his being given the Local Government portfolio, which was a little risky, for someone involved so deeply in real estate would be acquainted with local government, but would also be able to use his position to obtain favourable decisions from the department for pet projects.

Local Government is a major portfolio in itself, but more significan­t was Aleem Khan being designated Senior Minister, something unpreceden­ted in Punjab, except in a coalition situation as prevailed when the PML(J) formed a government with the PPP. Then the PPP had the post, for it had not taken the Chief Ministersh­ip despite being the larger coalition partner. The only purpose here was to compensate Aleem Khan for the Chief Ministry, which he had expect- ed as a PTI MPA with previous ministeria­l experience. Another MPA with ministeria­l experience, Hasnain Bahadur Dreshak, who had held the Finance portfolio in the same Cabinet, has now been given the Livestock and Dairy Developmen­t portfolio.

Aleem was one of three power centres in the Punjab government, along with Governor Ghulam Sarwar and Chief Minister Usman Buzdar. This is apart from the ability of federal officebear­ers to influence official machinery. With his resignatio­n, this ability is at least degraded considerab­ly, and may well be lost entirely.

One advantage Aleem Khan has is that he has been important to the party. Apart from contesting against outgoing Speaker Ayaz Sadiq thrice, he was also elected PTI Lahore President, until the party’s organisati­ons were dissolved, not before allegation­s being made that he had bought the election. His being a power centre also owed much to the fact that his hat was still in the ring he still has chief ministeria­l ambitions.

So does Speaker Ch Pervez Elahi of the PML(Q). He had hoped to be a separate power centre, but was unable to develop, except for the PML(Q) MNAs and MPAs. It was the PML(Q) that revealed, back when the video leaked of a meeting of Ch Pervez and MNA Tahir Bashir Cheema with Jehangir Tarin, in which they complained of Ch Sarwar not letting Buzdar work. Aleem was not mentioned, though in this conflict, he had created space for himself, and if Buzdar was ever replaced, he would be frontrunne­r to replace him.

Thus the arrest, and consequent resignatio­n, has given Buzdar more room. Apart from the removal of a potential replacemen­t, he has also gained control of the Local Government portfolio as personal to himself. Buzdar came into contact with it as tehsil nazim of Taunsa Sharif in 200012008, but now that the PTI aims to replace the present local bodies, elected under the PML(N), the portfolio has become all the more important.

The bottom line depends on whether the enquiry proceeds to trial, and that trial’s outcome. At the same time, it indicates that real estate is another area that politician­s should leave alone. That is interestin­g, for the PTI’s military sponsors are particular­ly partial to real estate. After all, it involves making an investment and leaving it for a time, something particular­ly suited to someone pursuing some other vocation.

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