Khaleej Times

Anti-graft court orders auction of assets of ex-minister Dar

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It’s up to the Punjab provincial government to decide whether to sell or keep the seized assets Mohammed Bashir, judge of anti-corruption court

islamabad — An anti-corruption court in Pakistan on Tuesday directed authoritie­s to auction the assets and seize the bank accounts of absconding former finance minister Ishaq Dar in a graft case filed against him in the Panama Papers scandal.

The case about owning “assets beyond known means of income” is among four graft cases filed by the National Accountabi­lity Bureau (NAB) following the Supreme Court’s order of July 28 against Dar and ousted prime minister Nawaz Sharif and his family.

The decision came on an applicatio­n filed by the NAB, seeking auction of Dar’s assets and asking the court to appoint a beneficiar­y of recovered amount, Dawn newspaper reported.

Ishaq Dar faces charges of concealing financial assets at home and abroad. He has been reportedly staying in London for over a year now.

The court said that the Punjab’s provincial government will be responsibl­e for auction. It empowered the provincial government to decide whether to sell or keep the seized assets, the report said.

Judge Mohammed Bashir had reserved the verdict on the applicatio­n on Monday after the antigraft watchdog submitted details of Dar’s assets.

The NAB had earlier moved the Islamabad-based accountabi­lity court for the auction of movable and immovable properties owned by Dar, a close aide of Sharif, as he has been in London since October 2017.

The Supreme Court last year ruled that Dar possessed assets worth over Rs830 million ($6.6 million), far more than his declared sources of income. Dar, the father-in-law of Sharif’s younger daughter, was already declared as absconder in the corruption case after he went to London in October last year but never came back to face the trial.

The case of assets beyond means was launched against Dar in September 2017 on the orders of Supreme Court after it disqualifi­ed Sharif and ordered corruption cases against him, his children Maryam Nawaz, Husain and Hasan and son-in-law Capt. (retd) Mohammed Safdar Awan.

The anti-corruption watchdog already seized all movable and immovable assets of 67-year-old Dar located in Lahore and Islamabad.

The Panama Papers case is about alleged money laundering by Sharif in the 1990s when he twice served as Pakistan’s prime minister to purchase assets in London. —

 ??  ?? Ishaq Dar
Ishaq Dar

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