IHC bins FIA plea to cancel Imran's bail in prohibited funding case

IHC bins FIA plea to cancel Imran's bail in prohibited funding case

Pakistan

States investigation agency failed to prove funding was linked with PTI chief

ISLAMABAD (Web Desk) - Observing that Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) failed to provide any proof linking former prime minister Imran Khan with the prohibited funding his party had allegedly received, the Islamabad High Court (IHC) rejected FIA’s petition to cancel the bail of the PTI chief in funding case.

The IHC stated that allegations made in the first information report (FIR) had nothing to do with Imran or Tariq Shafi. In its detailed judgement, the IHC division bench comprising Justice Mohsin Akhtar Kayani and Justice Tariq Mehmood Jahangiri, the court said there was ‘no proof’ that the money sent by Arif Naqvi was linked with criminal activity.

It said that the former premier had not signed any bank documents.The court held that the FIA could not produce ‘sufficient evidence’ in support of its request seeking the cancellation of Mr Khan’s bail.

A trial court had granted pre-arrest bail to Mr Khan in the prohibited funding case. The FIA counsel contended that it had been learnt that Arif Masood Naqvi, owner of M/s Wootton Cricket Limited (WCL), UAE (registered in Cayman Islands), had transferred ill-gotten money to the tune of $2.12 million to a UBL account.

The founder-owner of Abraaj Group UAE Mr Naqvi was imposed with a penalty by the Dubai Financial Services Authority for carrying out unauthorised activities in the Dubai International Financial Centre and misusing the investors’ money.

Mr Naqvi is also facing trial in UK and USA for defrauding investors, but PTI submitted an affidavit of Mr Naqvi to the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) stating that all the amounts collected in the WCL’s accounts were transferred to the party’s account in Pakistan.

The counsel argued that the affidavit was found to be false and forged while signatories and beneficiaries of the UBL account are Mr Khan and nine others. However, when the amount was transacted to the PTI’s account, 12 STRs (suspicious transaction reports) had to be reported by the UBL to the authorities concerned, but they had not performed their duties.

The FIA’s lawyer claimed that trial court had granted the pre-arrest bail to Mr Khan without due deliberations.The court observed that the FIR only reflects two eventualities — one,

Mr Naqvi has given an affidavit to the ECP regarding the foreign currency transferred into the PTI’s account but the said affidavit has been proved to be false/forged as two more transactions were made from WCL to two different accounts in Pakistan in May 2013.

The court noted that this has nothing to do with Mr Khan’s case as the FIA can investigate that the amount transacted by Mr Naqvi is ill-gotten money and his affidavit was false but both these aspects were not probed till date.

“The second element, which was highlighted in the entire record, is the allegation against bank’s officials who have allegedly not reported regarding 12 CTRs/STRs to the concerned authorities despite receiving of huge amount in US$ in the PTI’s account which reflects that matter should fall within the mandate of State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) being master regulator under SBP Act, 1956”, stated the court order.

The FIA failed to demonstrate “any of the regulation of the SBP where signatories of account in any scheduled bank are liable to prosecution,” it noted. As regards the allegation of changing PTI’s account with ‘Naya Pakistan’, the court ruled that it was not an offence at all.

With regards to the contention of prosecution that Mr Khan has not yet joined the inquiry, the court noted that this could not be the reason for bail cancellation. The bench subsequently dismissed the petition.