Yahoo - AFP, April 4,
2016
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| Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has been in power since 2013 (AFP Photo) |
The family
of Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif Monday defended their ownership of
offshore companies after they were named in the Panama Papers, one of the
biggest media leaks in history.
Revenue
generation is particularly sensitive for Pakistan's government, which is
receiving a $6.6 billion bailout package from the IMF and has a tax-to-GDP
ratio of 11 percent, among the lowest in the world.
The leak,
comprising 11.5 million documents from Panama-based law firm Mossack Fonseca,
shows how some of the world's most powerful people have secreted their money
offshore.
Among those
named are three of Sharif's four children -- daughter Maryam, who has been
tipped to be his political successor, and sons Hasan and Hussain -- with the
records showing they owned London real estate through offshore companies
administered by the firm.
"Nawaz
Sharif does not own any company but having companies in the name of his
children also raises questions," Umar Cheema of the Center for
Investigative Reporting in Pakistan, told AFP.
The centre
is partnered with the Investigative Consortium of Independent Journalists,
which spent months poring over the documents before Sunday's online release.
"There
are more than 200 Pakistanis which our report has identified, and they include
lawyers, lawmakers and some people from the judiciary," Cheema said.
Opposition
leader Imran Khan called for action against Sharif.
"Our
stance vindicated again as Sharif's wealth stashed abroad exposed," he
tweeted, adding the country's accountability watchdog, tax authorities and
election commission must take action.
But
Sharif's son Hussain told the country's largest private broadcaster Geo his
family had done "nothing wrong".
"Those
apartments are ours and those offshore companies are also ours," he said.
"There
is nothing wrong with it and I have never concealed them, nor do I need to do
that.
"It is
according to British law and laws of other countries that it is a legal way to
avoid unnecessary tax via offshore companies."
Hussain
said he left Pakistan in 1992 and therefore is not resident, adding Pakistani
tax law "says that if you are not staying in Pakistan for more than 138
days, then you are not required to declare your assets".
"We
voluntarily present ourselves before it or any other judicial and investigative
institution in Pakistan," he said in response to Khan's call for the
National Accountability Bureau to investigate.
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Several world leaders, including Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz, the prime
minister of Pakistan and the children of the president of Azerbaijan, also control
offshore companies (AFP Photo)
|
Low tax
collection
A spokesman
for Sharif family late Monday responded to the media reports, saying
"Panama leaks and ICIJ have made no allegations of wrongdoing against
Sharif family,".
"None
of the corporations mentioned are owned or run by Mr Nawaz Sharif, the prime
minister of Pakistan," the spokesman said in a statement, which was shared
by Maryam on her Twitter account.
The
statement said Maryam Nawaz "is merely a trustee of one of the
corporations owned by Mr Hussain Nawaz, which would only entitle her to
distribute the assets to Mr Hussain Nawaz's family if required".
As prime
minister, Sharif has invited investment in Pakistan. But the latest revelations
could raise uncomfortable questions about why his family has kept their wealth
abroad.
A report
commissioned by Britain's Department for International Development last year
said Pakistan's economy was facing an "existential crisis" stemming
from its woeful tax collection rates and inability to finance itself.
Ali Nadir,
a financial analyst, said the use of offshore companies was in some cases
legitimate.
But he
added: "I believe political and business leaders will be hard-pressed to
take the privacy defence given the worldwide move towards a better track of
money, tax evasion, laundering and corruption.
"This
may also start more locally focused probes as there are likely to be disclosure
issues."
The Panama
Papers have whipped up a storm of controversy over offshore wealth, ensnaring
political leaders, sports figures and underworld members across the globe in
the scandal.
'Panama Papers' law firm under the media's lenses https://t.co/m8gCZ9ZGz5 pic.twitter.com/2wNv9zcKuz— AFP news agency (@AFP) April 4, 2016
The Panama Papers: key facts on the huge journalists' investigation into tax
evasion (AFP Photo/Thomas Saint-Cricq, Philippe Mouche)
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