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Nawaz gets clean chit from ECP
By Irfan Ghauri
Published: June 14, 2017
64SHARES
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Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. PHOTO: AFP
ISLAMABAD: In a much-needed boost ahead of his appearance before the Panamagate joint investigation team (JIT), the election watchdog on Tuesday gave the beleaguered prime minister a clean chit after ‘verifying’ the statements of assets and liabilities he had submitted before it.
The Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) has, for the first time, started the process of verification of annual statements of assets and liabilities of all lawmakers for the financial year ending June 30, 2016.
The process was supposed to conclude by the end of the current month. But the newly-established political finance wing of the ECP is still stuck in its first phase of scrutinising assets of National Assembly members (MNAs), and has yet to get time to approach senators and members of provincial assemblies.
At ECP, PTI has the last laugh
According to sources in the ECP, the relevant ECP wing had found ‘anomalies’ in the statements of most of the MNAs when compared with those related to the previous two fiscal years. This prompted the wing to write to all such MNAs, including Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, to clarify their position.
“Around 50 per% of the MNAs we wrote to, seeking clarification over certain points, have been cleared … Prime Minister Sharif is among them,” an official of the ECP told The Express Tribune.
The ruling party could use the ECP clean chit to its advantage at a time when the Prime Minister’s family was facing a probe into its offshore assets, he added.
Cases of some 30% MNAs are in different stages of verification, he said, adding that an interesting development in this regard is that the rest of the 20% the ECP wrote to, either did not bother to respond at all or did not continue any commutation after an initial response.
Interestingly, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf chief Imran Khan’s case falls among those MNAs who declined to reply to the ECP letter, officials disclosed, requesting not to be named.
They said all members of the national and provincial assemblies are bound under Section 42A (1) of the Representation of Peoples Act, 1975, (ROPA) to submit their own statements of assets and liabilities along with those of their spouses and dependents to the ECP by September 30 of each year.
ECP places order for 150 voting machines
Incorporated in ROPA in 2002 during Musharraf’s era, the provision was used as a cosmetic exercise. The ECP used to publish the said statements “as they were” till it decided last year to verify them, said the officials.
Though not a thorough verification, the ECP approved modus operandi for its new wing before starting the exercise in December last year for the first time, they said.
As per the standard operating procedure followed by the political finance wing, all types of assets are categorised – agricultural properties, corporate or business, real estate properties, industrial establishments and domestic and offshore investments and entities, according to official sources.
The directorate of the political finance wing compares a statement of a member with his statements submitted in the past two years, they added. It made simple comparison with respect to cost, changing business trends, acquisition and utilisation of assets over the past two years and values of expenditure.
The variation beyond the common sense was considered an anomaly, and the ECP’s finance wing wrote letters to lawmakers asking them to clarify such anomalies.
It seems this first-time exercise might become the last one as the parliamentary committee working on new electoral laws has proposed changes to the relevant law. If the proposed changes in the relevant laws are approved by parliament, the tax declarations of lawmakers would be treated as their annual statements of assets and liabilities and they would not be required to submit statements separately to the ECP.
Moreover, this exercise of verification of assets of all lawmakers for the financial year 2015-16 which should have been concluded by June 30 is still stuck in its first phase – the verification of MNAs statements of assets and liabilities.
By Irfan Ghauri
Published: June 14, 2017
64SHARES
SHARE TWEET
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. PHOTO: AFP
ISLAMABAD: In a much-needed boost ahead of his appearance before the Panamagate joint investigation team (JIT), the election watchdog on Tuesday gave the beleaguered prime minister a clean chit after ‘verifying’ the statements of assets and liabilities he had submitted before it.
The Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) has, for the first time, started the process of verification of annual statements of assets and liabilities of all lawmakers for the financial year ending June 30, 2016.
The process was supposed to conclude by the end of the current month. But the newly-established political finance wing of the ECP is still stuck in its first phase of scrutinising assets of National Assembly members (MNAs), and has yet to get time to approach senators and members of provincial assemblies.
At ECP, PTI has the last laugh
According to sources in the ECP, the relevant ECP wing had found ‘anomalies’ in the statements of most of the MNAs when compared with those related to the previous two fiscal years. This prompted the wing to write to all such MNAs, including Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, to clarify their position.
“Around 50 per% of the MNAs we wrote to, seeking clarification over certain points, have been cleared … Prime Minister Sharif is among them,” an official of the ECP told The Express Tribune.
The ruling party could use the ECP clean chit to its advantage at a time when the Prime Minister’s family was facing a probe into its offshore assets, he added.
Cases of some 30% MNAs are in different stages of verification, he said, adding that an interesting development in this regard is that the rest of the 20% the ECP wrote to, either did not bother to respond at all or did not continue any commutation after an initial response.
Interestingly, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf chief Imran Khan’s case falls among those MNAs who declined to reply to the ECP letter, officials disclosed, requesting not to be named.
They said all members of the national and provincial assemblies are bound under Section 42A (1) of the Representation of Peoples Act, 1975, (ROPA) to submit their own statements of assets and liabilities along with those of their spouses and dependents to the ECP by September 30 of each year.
ECP places order for 150 voting machines
Incorporated in ROPA in 2002 during Musharraf’s era, the provision was used as a cosmetic exercise. The ECP used to publish the said statements “as they were” till it decided last year to verify them, said the officials.
Though not a thorough verification, the ECP approved modus operandi for its new wing before starting the exercise in December last year for the first time, they said.
As per the standard operating procedure followed by the political finance wing, all types of assets are categorised – agricultural properties, corporate or business, real estate properties, industrial establishments and domestic and offshore investments and entities, according to official sources.
The directorate of the political finance wing compares a statement of a member with his statements submitted in the past two years, they added. It made simple comparison with respect to cost, changing business trends, acquisition and utilisation of assets over the past two years and values of expenditure.
The variation beyond the common sense was considered an anomaly, and the ECP’s finance wing wrote letters to lawmakers asking them to clarify such anomalies.
It seems this first-time exercise might become the last one as the parliamentary committee working on new electoral laws has proposed changes to the relevant law. If the proposed changes in the relevant laws are approved by parliament, the tax declarations of lawmakers would be treated as their annual statements of assets and liabilities and they would not be required to submit statements separately to the ECP.
Moreover, this exercise of verification of assets of all lawmakers for the financial year 2015-16 which should have been concluded by June 30 is still stuck in its first phase – the verification of MNAs statements of assets and liabilities.