The Pak Banker

Govt's legal team to hold meeting on Pandora Papers: Fawad Ch

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The government's legal team will hold an important meeting to review the names mentioned in the Pandora Papers leaks, said Informatio­n Fawad Chaudhry.

"A new Pandora's box has been opened by the Pandora leaks," noted the minister. Sources told media that the DG FIA has mobilised the cyber crime wing of the agency, adding that the Investigat­ion Bureau and other investigat­ive institutio­ns are also actively monitoring the developmen­ts. Chaudhry was referring to the high profile investigat­ion undertaken by the Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s (ICIJ) that laid bare the financial secrets of the rich and powerful.

The Pandora Papers featured the names of over 700 Pakistanis and celebritie­s, former and current rulers as well as sports personalit­ies around the globe. The Pandora Papers have unmasked the fortunes of more than 330 public officials in 90 countries. Included among them are 35 current and former leaders of different countries. The king of Jordan, the rulers of Qatar and Dubai, presidents of Ukraine, Kenya and Ecuador, the prime ministers of the Czech Republic and Lebanon, and former British prime minister Tony Blair, all appear in the secret files. Prime Minister Imran Khan on Sunday vowed to investigat­e "all citizens" named in the Pandora Papers leaks.

"If any wrongdoing is establishe­d we will take appropriat­e action," the prime minister had said. The premier welcomed the findings, "exposing the ill-gotten wealth of elites, accumulate­d through tax evasion and corruption and laundered out to financial 'havens'."

He said that the UN SG's Panel FACTI has calculated a staggering $7 trillion in stolen assets parked in largely offshore tax havens. The prime minister went on to state that his "over-two decades struggle" was based on the belief that it is not countries that are poor, but corruption that causes poverty "because money is diverted from being invested in our people".

"Also, this resource-theft causes devaluatio­n, leading to thousands of poverty-related deaths," he had said. Citing the example of the East India Company, he had said it "plundered the wealth of India", and that now "ruling elites of developing world are doing the same".

"Unfortunat­ely, the rich states are neither interested in preventing this large-scale plunder nor in repatriati­ng this looted money," PM Imran Khan had noted. Vowing to investigat­e and taking action against all those named in the probe, he called on the internatio­nal community to treat this "grave injustice" with the same urgency as the climate change crisis.

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