Eastern Eye (UK)

Khan party denies illegal cash claim

PTI REJECTS ELECTION COMMISSION’S ‘FOREIGN FUNDS’ FINDING

- (AFP)

Pakistan’s former prime minister Imran Khan’s party accepted millions of dollars in illegal funds from foreign individual­s and groups, the election commission ruled on Tuesday (2).

The case dates back to 2014 when a disgruntle­d founding member of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) filed a case against his party leadership accusing it of financial irregulari­ties.

The Election Commission Pakistan found Khan’s party concealed 16 bank accounts and accepted donations from foreigners or foreign groups based in Australia, Canada, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and the Cayman Islands.

Pakistani law bars political parties from receiving funds and donations from foreign individual­s and companies.

The commission also said financial details submitted by Khan were “found to be grossly inaccurate”.

Pakistan’s prime minister Shehbaz Sharif – who came to power in April after Khan’s ouster – said the commission’s verdict showed “yet again that he (Khan) is a certified liar”.

“(The) nation should ponder over the implicatio­ns of his politics funded by foreigners,” Sharif tweeted on Tuesday.

The party has denied the accusation­s. Responding to the decision, Fawad Chaudhry, a senior PTI leader said the party had taken funds from “overseas Pakistanis”, not foreign nationals.

“Overseas Pakistanis are the backbone of Pakistan’s economy, and we would continue to rely on them for funding,” Chaudhry told reporters.

The cricket star turned politician

Khan swept into power in 2018 thanks to an electorate weary of the dynastic politics of the country’s two major parties, with the popular former sports star promising to sweep away decades of entrenched corruption and cronyism.

But in April, he was kicked out following a no-confidence vote. Khan was brought down in part by his failure to rectify the country’s dire economic situation, including its crippling debt, shrinking foreign currency reserves and soaring inflation.

He also reportedly fell out with the country’s powerful military.

Khan has since staged a series of rallies across the country, touting a claim that he was pushed out of office in a “foreign conspiracy” and heaping pressure on a coalition of former opposition parties now in power.

The PTI party has been sent a notice in order to explain the prohibited funds, or it can challenge the order in court.

The commission, meanwhile, could pursue confiscati­ng the prohibited funds, while the government could take the case to the Supreme Court to ban Khan’s party.

However, legal expert Osama Malik said: “Politicall­y, it would not be an ideal precedent to set for one group of political parties to ban their rivals.”

The commission is also investigat­ing a foreign funding case against two other major political parties – Sharif’s ruling PML-N and its coalition partner, the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP).

Both parties deny the claims.

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