Pak okays law to ban Hafiz Saeed, seize assets
NEWDELHI: Less than a week before a crucial meeting of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) that will assess Pakistan’s actions to choke terror financing, Islamabad has quietly amended its antiterror law to ban those listed as terrorists by the UN, including Hafiz Saeed and the JuD, and framed new regulations to seize their assets.
On Friday, President Mamnoon Hussain promulgated an ordinance to amend the Anti-Terrorism Act of 1997 so that individuals and groups listed as terrorist entities by the UN Security Council would be proscribed within the country.
A cabinet meeting chaired by Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi Tuesday gave in-principle approval to the Anti-Terrorism (Freezing and Seizure) Rules, 2018, an official statement said. Sources in Islamabad said this was a step towards formal action to freeze bank accounts and seize assets of groups such as the Jamaat-ud-Dawah and Falah-eInsaniyat Foundation that have been sanctioned by the UNSC under Resolution 1267.
The moves came days ahead of a plenary meeting of the FATF to be held in Paris during February 18-23 that will assess whether Pakistan has complied with the body’s recommendations to curb terror financing and money laundering.
If Pakistan fails to clear the review, it could be placed in the FATF’s “grey list”, which would result in stringent checks on international transactions, foreign investments and commercial lending.
Pakistan was on the grey list from February 2012 to February 2015, when all financial transactions were monitored by FATF.
The ordinance promulgated by the Pakistani president amended Section 11B of the Anti-Terrorism Act (related to bans on groups) and Section 11EE (related to bans on individuals). The amendments state that entities sanctioned by the UN Security Council will be proscribed in Pakistan on an “ex parte basis”.
The move will bring the Pakistani law in line with the UN sanctions list and remove ambiguities on the status of Saeed, the founder of the LeT. Though the UNSC listed the JuD in December 2008, after the Mumbai attacks, it was never banned in Pakistan.