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Under-fire govt beats retreat on GIDC amnesty

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Under-fire govt beats retreat on GIDC amnesty
Khaleeq KianiUpdated September 05, 2019
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ISLAMABAD: Adviser to the Prime Minister on Finance Abdul Hafeez Shaikh (second left) along with Abdul Razak Dawood, Omar Ayub Khan, Makhdoom Khusro Bakhtiar and Hammad Azhar addressing a joint press conference on Wednesday.—White Star


ISLAMABAD: Surrendering to public outcry, Prime Minister Imran Khan finally decided on Wednesday to withdraw a controversial ordinance promulgated last week that offered Rs210 billion financial amnesty to big businesses.

Read: Outcry causes govt rethink of gas cess relief

The government will also ask the Supreme Court of Pakistan to club all stay orders issued by various high courts and itself take an expedited decision in ongoing cases on the Gas Infrastructure Development Cess (GIDC). A day earlier, the federal cabinet had asked the ministry of law to amend the GIDC Ordinance of Aug 27, 2019 to include the condition of forensic audit before signing settlement agreement with these sectors namely fertiliser, general industry, IPPs, generation companies, K-Electric and CNG sector.

However, the criticism continued to grow in the mainstream and social media, as well as from within the ruling party, compelling the government to reverse the whole initiative ab initio. “In view of the recent controversy, the prime minister, in the interest of transparency and good governance, has decided to withdraw the said ordinance”, said an announcement by the prime minister’s office.

It said the prime minister also directed “the attorney general to move an application for urgent hearing in the Supreme Court, so that the matter is decided at the earliest, strictly in accordance with the law and the Constitution”.

Matter to now be decided in court

This was later reiterated during a joint news conference of the government’s entire economic team including Prime Minister’s Advisers Dr Abdul Hafeez Shaikh and Abdul Razak Dawood, Federal Ministers Khusro Bakhtiar, Omar Ayub Khan and Hammad Azhar and special assistant to the prime minister on petroleum Nadeem Babar.

Dr Shaikh said the prime minister had ordered that the matter be referred to the Supreme Court which should now guide on how to proceed with the issue. He said the government’s basic objective was to take any decision which was in accordance with law, in the interest of people instead of any vested interest and transparency should be such that any fair minded person could appreciate it.

Asked if the amnesty decision was really unfair or was it a failure of the cabinet members to defend a government decision that forced the prime minister to go back on it, Mr Omar Ayub denied such notions, saying the prime minister believed that ‘justice must not only be done but it must also be seen to be done’ and hence he decided to keep everything above board.

He said the attorney general would now request the Chief Justice of Pakistan to call GIDC related cases in high courts, club all of them together and hold an early hearing on the subject and decide the matter on merit once and for all.

The prime minister said that total amount stuck in the GIDC litigation from January 2012 till December 2018 was about Rs417bn. In the first round of litigation, the Supreme Court annulled the collection between 2012 and 2014 on technical grounds because it was imposed through finance bill and the federal government’s review petition was also dismissed by the Supreme Court.

Thereafter fresh legislation was brought about through an act of parliament, but it was challenged before high courts and a set of appeals was also pending before the Supreme Court. The government believed the act introduced in 2015 would hold the ground because it was duly passed by both houses of the parliament.

The prime minister said the nation should also know that going to the court carries a risk because the decision could go either way. “This means that the government could get the whole amount or could lose it all and possibly forgo any prospects of future revenue collections under this head”, the prime minister said.

“Also on top of this, the government could be saddled with the burden of administering refunds of approximately Rs295bn of the principal amount”, the prime minister warned while ordering withdrawal of the controversial GIDC amendment ordinance.

Published in Dawn, September 5th, 2019
 
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That Ordinance Was Perfectly Fine But For Dishonest Anchorpersons Like Ehtisham Ameer ud Din Calling It NRO Without Going Into Details and Background On Why This Had To Be Done
 
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Does this mean many people will be laid off as many here were giving this reason for abolishing GIDC ?
 
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Just blame everything on previous democratic governments. That will make all of PTI's Shaikh Chilli dreams come true.
 
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We as a nation has no concept of the cost of time and choosing its battels. Time that has been spent on these cases already and the time it would take to get a verdict on this from SC.
The money that could have been recorved with out of court settlement which GoP might NOT receive at all now.

The govt needs to firm up on its decision and stand by them. Transparency is good but it comes at a cost.

Just blame everything on previous democratic governments. That will make all of PTI's Shaikh Chilli dreams come true.

It is previous govt fault. Who introduced this scheme to begin with. This govt is trying to resolve these issues and you people are not even letting her do that.
 
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It is previous govt fault. Who introduced this scheme to begin with. This govt is trying to resolve these issues and you people are not even letting her do that.

It's not like as if an opposition party is holding a 126-day long dharna costing 2% loss to GDP growth, calling for civil unrest, encouraging people to deface the Pakistani currency. But hey, crying is not a crime so, keep crying.
 
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It's not like as if an opposition party is holding a 126-day long dharna costing 2% loss to GDP growth, calling for civil unrest, encouraging people to deface the Pakistani currency. But hey, crying is not a crime so, keep crying.
This was introduced in PPP era and has been an ongoing issue since then. What did your patwari govt do to resolve this ?
 
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I Support the Konstitution and the courts and trust them more than this imf imposed corrupt government.
 
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That razaq daud is same guy behind LPG terminal fraud..
 
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I Support the Konstitution and the courts and trust them more than this imf imposed corrupt government.

Look who is back. What Konstitution ?

Give it a rest. It was so peaceful here while you were gone.
 
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Look who is back. What Konstitution ?

Give it a rest. It was so peaceful here while you were gone.

It said the prime minister also directed “the attorney general to move an application for urgent hearing in the Supreme Court, so that the matter is decided at the earliest, strictly in accordance with the law and the Constitution”.
 
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Razak Dawood and Nadeem Babar will form a policy which will benefit people and reduce profit margin of their own companies.
 
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This was introduced in PPP era and has been an ongoing issue since then. What did your patwari govt do to resolve this ?

I think the PML Government managed to increase Pakistan's GDP Growth Rate to 5.2% with heavy borrowing while the inexperienced PTI Government managed to decrease the GDP Growth Rate to 2.5% with even heavier borrowing.
 
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I think the PML Government managed to increase Pakistan's GDP Growth Rate to 5.2% with heavy borrowing while the inexperienced PTI Government managed to decrease the GDP Growth Rate to 2.5% with even heavier borrowing.
Stop parroting the lines given to you, while working for them. I am asking what did your patwari govt did to fix the GIDC issue ?


The prime minister said the nation should also know that going to the court carries a risk because the decision could go either way. “This means that the government could get the whole amount or could lose it all and possibly forgo any prospects of future revenue collections under this head”, the prime minister said.

“Also on top of this, the government could be saddled with the burden of administering refunds of approximately Rs295bn of the principal amount”, the prime minister warned while ordering withdrawal of the controversial GIDC amendment ordinance.
@Retired Troll
 
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