Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Pak needs to enact laws to fulfil FATF targets

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Pakistan will have to enact additional laws to facilitate action that needs to be taken by authoritie­s to apprehend and prosecute people involved in terror financing in order to fully implement the Financial Action Task Force’s (FATF) action plan, it was decided at a key meeting held this week.

At a meeting of Pakistan’s National Executive Committee (NEC) on anti money-laundering on Monday, it was decided that additional legislatio­n will have to be enacted on at least two counts to implement the FATF’S action plan by June, the Dawn newspaper reported.

The meeting of senior officials was chaired by Pakistan’s finance minister Abdul Hafeez Shaikh to review efforts in the aftermath of the FATF’S plenary meeting last month.

At the conclusion of the plenary meeting on February 25, the FATF retained Pakistan on its “grey list” and asked the country to complete the action plan to counter terror financing before June, including steps to investigat­e and prosecute individual­s and entities involved in such activities. The FATF said Pakistan had “largely addressed” 24 of the 27 items in the action plan. However, the FATF president Marcus Pleyer pointed out the deficienci­es yet to be addressed are all “serious” as they related to terror financing.

At the NEC meeting, it was decided that the additional legislatio­n has to “cover some weaknesses in the existing framework that limited the authoritie­s from taking action, including imposing sanction or apprehendi­ng those acting for or on behalf of designated terrorist entities or individual­s and prosecutin­g targeted persons and entities or those working for them”, the report said. The Pakistan government will have to submit an updated report within 30 days to the FATF on progress in legislatio­n and other steps to be taken to address outstandin­g concerns.

PM Khan to seek vote of confidence in parl, says report

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Imran Khan will seek a vote of confidence in the parliament, foreign minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi said on Wednesday, according to a Dawn news report. The announceme­nt came after former Pakistani prime minister Yusuf Raza Gilani on Wednesday defeated ruling Pakistan Tehreek-e-insaf party’s Hafeez Sheikh, an adviser to the prime minister, in a Senate election for the Islamabad seat. The announceme­nt came after former Pakistani prime minister Yusuf Raza Gilani on Wednesday defeated ruling Pakistan Tehreek-e-insaf party’s Hafeez Sheikh, an adviser to the prime minister, in a Senate election for the Islamabad seat. The defeat comes as a major setback for PM Khan’s government.

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