Supreme Court Seeks Foreign Currency Transaction Details, Orders State Bank Of Pakistan Report

Supreme Court seeks foreign currency transaction details, orders State Bank of Pakistan report

The Supreme Court (SC) on Thursday, seeking details of all transactions above $50,000 from Pakistan during 2017-18, instructed the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) to submit a sealed report on the matter in seven days.

Islamabad, (Pakistan Point News - 26th Apr, 2018) : The Supreme Court (SC) on Thursday, seeking details of all transactions above $50,000 from Pakistan during 2017-18, instructed the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) to submit a sealed report on the matter in seven days. A three-judge bench, headed by Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Mian Saqib Nisar, passed the instructions during a suo motu hearing of a case pertaining to foreign bank accounts owned by Pakistani citizens.

The top judge, focusing on Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) leader Jahangir Tareen, also asked regarding the amount of money transferred abroad by the PTI leader. "Jahangir Tareen made assets abroad, but stated otherwise in the balance sheets," the CJP remarked, adding that the SC should know of Pakistani citizens holding accounts and properties in Switzerland. "Such policies were self-made for own benefit through which money can be transferred abroad," Justice Nisar remarked.

The chief justice further added that the aim is to take advantage of the amnesty scheme before September. Earlier this month, PM Abbasi announced the much-awaited tax amnesty scheme with an aim of broadening the tax net and offering wealthy Pakistanis the option to declare their hidden assets in Pakistan and abroad. Pakistanis having offshore assets can bring them back by paying only two per cent tax. However, in case of declaration of a foreign fixed asset only, tax applicability will be three per cent while foreign liquid assets including cash, securities and bonds can be declared on five per cent tax payment.

The prime minister also offered to legalise the hidden local assets at five per cent. Last month, the top court had tasked a 13-member committee to suggest ways to trace and retrieve assets from abroad in view of a suo motu notice on the ill-gotten money of Pakistani citizens in foreign banks. The bench approved a committee comprising State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) Governor Tariq Bajwa, Federal board of Revenue (FBR) Chairman Tariq Pasha, Additional Attorney General Mohammad Waqar Rana, senior lawyer Khalid Anwar, SC Advocate Ikramul Haq, finance secretary Arif Ahmed Khan, Shabbar Zaidi, Mehmood Mandiwala, Bashir Ali Muhammad, Tariq Paracha, Nisar Muhammad Khan and their terms of references (TORs) for retrieving money deposited in foreign accounts by Pakistani citizens.

The TORs put forth by the committee included conducting a diagnostic analysis and layout of the current landscape related to the outflow of foreign exchange from Pakistan resulting in accumulation of assets abroad by Pakistani citizens. It also includes examining existing legal regime and practices; bilateral treaties and multilateral conventions that be used to stem the unregulated outflow of foreign exchange from Pakistan, tracing of undeclared assets held abroad by Pakistani citizens and retrieve such assets especially ones generated with proceeds of crime. It suggests a study of steps taken by other countries to trace and retrieve assets of their citizens in foreign countries.