ISLAMABAD:
Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) chairman Imran Khan on Monday submitted
to the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) his much-awaited reply,
which raised questions about what he had earlier said regarding the
procedure adopted for the acquisition of land for his Banigala
residence.
Mr Khan had claimed in his assets declaration
that he had got the land measuring 300 kanals as a gift from ex-wife
Jemima Khan but now he said he had purchased the property.
During
a hearing, Chief Election Commissioner retired Justice Sardar Muhammad
Raza Khan said the decision on the disqualification references against
Imran Khan and PTI secretary general Jehangir Tareen would be announced
after the completion of arguments on Dec 15.
The
commission also adjourned until Dec 15 the hearing of a
disqualification petition against retired Captain Mohammad Safdar, the
son-in-law of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.
The CEC was
displeased with the attitude of lawyers, saying the commission had not
seen the PTI chief’s written reply yet, though the same was being
reported line-by-line by the electronic media.
“You take pleasure in giving arguments out of the courts,” he said and advised them to get verdicts outside as well.
In
the written reply submitted to the ECP afterwards, Imran Khan said he
had borrowed money from his ex-wife Jemima Khan to pay for the Banigala
land. He said he had purchased the land on March 13, 2002 for Rs43.5
million and the amount was payable in instalments.
He
said he initially paid Rs6.5m from his available resources in Pakistan,
with the intention to fund the balance from the sale proceeds of his
apartment in London. He said as the purchase deal was potentially in
jeopardy because of delay in the sale transaction of the London
apartment, his then wife Jemima agreed to provide funds to pay
instalments.
“The short-term loan arrangement (between
husband and wife) was implemented with the understanding that Mrs Khan
would be repaid in the United Kingdom on completion of the sale of
London apartment…”, the reply read.
The balance portion
of the funds required to settle the remaining payments were remitted,
from time to time through official banking channels. He said these funds
were declared to the State Bank upon being converted to equivalent
Pakistani rupees. The amount was paid to the seller through crossed
cheques.
Imran Khan said that subsequent to the sale of
the London apartment on March 2003, he repaid and refunded the
equivalent amount to Jemima Khan in the United Kingdom.
“Mrs
Jemima Khan was the actual and recorded owner of the Banigala land. In
view of subsequent separation/divorce between the answering respondent
and Mrs Jemima Khan, the Banigala land was transferred to the former
through a gift on behalf of the latter.”
He said he had
refused to claim any share from Jemima’s wealth which under the UK laws
would have been 50 per cent of the total.
The PTI chief
appended documents with the written reply to prove that full stamp duty
payable on each transfer of the Banigala land had been paid and
deposited with the treasury. There was no income or other tax incidence
on such acquisition or transfer. “Therefore no question of tax evasion
or any loss to the public exchequer...arises.”
About the
allegation of non-declaration of his off-shore company, he said the
only asset under M/s Niazi Services Ltd (NSL) was the London apartment
that was sold in April 2003. Once the lone asset was sold, the NSL
existed only on papers, without any asset.
He also dismissed allegations of misusing the 2002 amnesty scheme, laundering any undeclared asset or indulging in tax fraud.
He
said he had deposited 12pc of the total cost of the London apartment as
tax, even though strictly there was no mandatory requirement in terms
of the scheme. He said there was neither obligation nor an income tax
implication in Pakistan with regards to the acquisition of the London
apartment which had been purchased by him in 1983 from tax-paid earnings
abroad. He claimed that there was no mandatory obligation to declare it
in Pakistan.
Tareen case
During the hearing of the disqualification reference against
Mr Tareen, counsel for applicant Muhammad Khan Daha pleaded that there
was contradiction in the agricultural income shown by Mr Tareen in his
nomination papers and the one provided to the Federal Board of Revenue
(FBR). He asked the ECP to summon the record from the FBR.
“Why did you not annex the record while submitting the reference with the speaker?” the CEC asked.
When
the applicant’s counsel said the information was available but record
was not, an ECP member wondered how the NA speaker had forwarded the
reference to the ECP without perusing the record.
“Did
we ask you to file a reference?” the CEC asked and said it was for the
applicant to bring the record on which the reference was based.
Mr
Tareen’s lawyer said the allegations pertained to pre-election matters.
He said Mr Tareen was the highest taxpayer among members of the
National Assembly. He pointed out that the inside trading took place in
2007 while Mr Tareen had been elected to the National Assembly in a
bye-poll held in 2015.
Published in Dawn December 6th, 2016
source: http://www.dawn.com/news/1300741/jemima-lent-money-to-buy-banigala-land-imran-tells-ecp
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