Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
CORRUPTION
The Assets
Let us now look at the assets of PSMC. Out of total 19000 acres of
land, the Government has offered 4457 acres of land for bidding purpose.
The government hired M/S Sadar-ud-din Associates to evaluate the said
land. It
evaluated the price of the land at the rate of rupees 10-11 million per acre
whereas its actual market price is more than 100 billions rupees.
Profits
PSMC had also wiped out its entire accumulated losses by the year
2004-05 and posted a net profit of rupees 3.938 billion. In the next year it
rose to Rs. 6 billions. Hardly, any other state enterprise of its nature in
whole of Pakistan can boast of such achievements.
Valuation
The Privatization Commission commissioned Citigroup Global
Markets Limited (which associated A.F. Ferguson, Orr Dignam & Co. and
Corus Consultant) in connection with the proposed sale of a 75% of stake in
PSMC. The Citigroup submitted a report with a disclaimer that the report has
not been prepared with a view to public disclosure. In preparing this report,
City Group ‘relied upon’ the accuracy and completeness of the information
received by it from PSMC or Corus Consulting without independent
verification thereof.
The report further said, ‘Such estimates, projections, targets or
forecasts involved significant assumptions and subjective judgments which
may or may not prove to be correct and there can be no assurance that any
estimates, projections, targets or forecasts are attainable or will be realized.
No representation or warranty, express or employed, is made by CGML as to
the accuracy, completeness or fairness of any information contained in this
report and, so far as is permitted by law and except in the case of fraud by
the party concerned, no responsibility whatsoever is accepted for the
accuracy or sufficiency thereof or for errors, omissions or misstatements
negligent or otherwise, relating thereto. This report should not be regarded as
constituting an opinion as to be fairness or otherwise of any offer for an
equity stake in PSMC, nor relied on as a basis to proceed, or not to proceed,
with a formal offer for an equity stake in PSMC’.
So this is the report on which the whole exercise of the determination
of reference price, bidding etc is based. It does not need a special knowledge
to declare that the report is not worth the paper on which it is written. This
trash should have been put into a dust bin rather than making it the sole basis
for the sale of our invaluable and strategic family silver.
Reference Price
The Citigroup submitted its report to the Privatization Commission on
30-3-2006 based on cash flows forecast developed till FY 2015 and without
valuation of the 4457 acres of the prime land. On the same day, yes on the
same day, the PC examined the report ( 200 pages of detailed figure work)
and submitted its summary to the CCOP on the same day. The minutes of the
cabinet meeting dated 31-3-2006 reveal that Privatization Division informed
the CCOP that the Financial Advisor (Citigroup) has recommended a value
of US$ 375 million for privatization of PSMC on 100% equity basis.
CCOP was informed that FA’s valuation of US$ 375 million for 100%
equity stake is based on the average of the following three valuation
methodologies [ (i) Discounted Free Cash Flow Analysis (ii) Public Multiple
Analysis (iii) Precedents Transaction Analysis] with a 10% discount.
Bidding
On the same day i.e. 31-3-2006, the bidding took place. Its process is
also intriguing. In pursuance of request for Expression of Interest, 19 parties
applied for pre-qualification out of which, nine were qualified.
Out of these nine, the following six pre-qualified parties formed two bidding
consortiums ( rest lost interest or were compensated) ) and took part in the
bidding:
Letter of Acceptance
Further to the bidding held on 31st March 2006, the Commission
declared, on the same day, the consortium to be the successful bidder by
accepting the bid of Rs.16.80 per share at the aggregate sale price of Rs.
21,680, 186,220.00 (Rupees twenty one billion, six hundred and eighty
million, one hundred and eighty six thousand, two hundred and twenty). On
the same day, the Commission issued the Letter of Acceptance (LOA) to the
authorized attorneys of individual companies forming the bidding
consortium. Three things deserved to be noted:
(i). Under section 4 of the Privatization (Modes And Procedure) Rules, 2001,
“upon selection of a highest ranked bidder, the Privatization Board shall
refer the matter for approval, or rejection of such highest ranked bidder with
full justification, to the Cabinet”. It was not done. After the bidding, the
letter of approval of bid was issued and LOA was also issued;
(ii) the said letter was not issued in the name of the consortium, rather LOA
was issued to individual constituent companies;
(iii) the representatives attorneys of all the three constituent companies are
two Rizviz: Mr. Zaigham Adil Rizvi, Mr. Ahsan Zahir Rizvi, and again, Mr.
Zaigham Adil Rizvi. (Is it a strange coincidence or a deliberate scheme? Let
the readers judge! )
(iv). In the bidding process, Al-Tuwairiqi was part of consortium but the
letter was issued in the name of Al-Ittefaq which was replaced later in the
consortium agreement dated 20-4-2006; how the Commission knew it in
advance that this replacement will be done after 20 days
(v). under our law, a company can only do business in Pakistan if Board of
Investment gives permission and the said company is registered with
Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan under section 451 of the
Companies Ordinance 1984; in this case, only Arif Habib Securities was
registered here; so why such letter was issued to these unregistered
companies?.
And about Arif Habib, an application was moved in the apex court on
the accounts of pending money suits ( Rs. 12 billons) against him in courts in
Sindh and his role in the alleged crash of Karachi Stock Exchange in 2005
wherein he made about Rs 5 billion in one day by manipulation as per
enquiry committee appointed by the Securities and Exchange Commission of
Pakistan. ( the report is available on SECP web site)
But the Share Purchase Agreement was executed between the Pakistan and
(i) PSMC SPV (Mauritius)
(ii) Arif Habib Securities
(iii) Arif Habib s/o Habib Haji Shakoor.
The following became the guarantors of the agreement: (iv) ATG Holdings
Mauritius (v) Al- Ittefaq (vi) MMK Holdings (Mauritius) (vii).
Magnitogorsk.
“On the very next day, CCOP determined the reference price of the share @
Rs.16.18 less than the value suggested by Privatization Commission @
Rs.17.43 per share, whereas final bid was accepted @ Rs.16.80 per share.”
“It may also be noted that as against the above price, the GOP as well as
Privatization Commission has extended following benefits to the purchaser:
i) The stock in trade in the Unit worth about Rs.10 billion, to be
handed over to the purchaser,
ii) The cash worth about Rs. 8.559 billion lying in its account, out
of which post dated cheques of about Rs. 7.67 billion have
already been issued to clear the liability of loans, which were
due form the year 2013 to 2019.
iii) The Tax of Rs.3 billion has already been paid, out of which Rs.1
billion will be refunded to the purchaser on taking the
possession of the Unit.
iv) Total loss to Government in this way works out to Rs.18 billion
(net) (10.00+7.67+1.00)
v) Above all, the Government has accepted the liability to pay
compensation of about Rs. 15 billion to the worker as Golden
Hand Shake Scheme, which will be another loss to the State.”
‘Conscious of the mandate of Article 153 and 154 of the Constitution, we
hold that the establishment and working of the Council of Common Interest
(CCI) is a cornerstone of the Federal Structure providing for protection of
the rights of the federating units. Mindful that the important institution is
not functioning presently, and taking note of the statement made by the
council for the federal government Mr. Abdul Hafeez Pirzada that the
process for making it functional is underway, we direct the federal
government to do the needful expeditiously as far as possible but not latter
than 6 weeks. -------by way of propriety it would be in order if the matter is
referred to the counsel of common interest CCI for consideration’.(
EDITOR’S NOTE: Article 153 deals with the constitution of the CCI.
Article 154 mandates the CCI to formulate and regulate policies in relation
to matters in Part II of the Federal Legislative List. The Part II of the Federal
Legislative List includes ‘Development of industries, where development
under Federal control is declared by Federal law to be expedient in the
public interest; institutions, establishments, bodies and corporations
administered or managed by the Federal Government ----all undertakings,
projects and schemes of such institutions, establishments, bodies and
corporations, industries, projects and undertakings owned wholly or partially
by the Federation or by a corporation set up by the Federation. In other
words the privatization of PSMC should have been placed before CCI.)
Conclusions
It is not difficult to judge that the ‘deal’ has been managed from the day one
to benefit certain people. Leaving aside ‘acts of omission and commission,
out of which some have been mentioned and the rest will be precisely
documented by the highest court of the land in its detailed judgment, let us
calculate the final figure.
What a Steal?
Dr Farrukh Saleem: June 11, 2006: the News
Pakistan Steel Mills Corporation (PSMC) on the auction table. PSMC going
for Rs21.68 billion. PSMC going for Rs21.68 billion. PSMC going for
Rs21.68 billion. PSMC gone for Rs21.68 billion. Pakistan Steel Mills
Corporation sold for Rs21.68 billion (75 per cent shares for an equivalent of
$360 million). What a deal! What a steal?
Our treasury now expects Rs21.68 billion in return for selling 75 per cent of
Pak Steel's shares. Of the Rs21.68 billion, the Government of Pakistan (GoP)
has agreed to pay a maximum of Rs15 billion in 'golden handshakes', 'special
golden handshakes' and a voluntary separation scheme (VSS). According to
Lieutenant-general (retd.) Abdul Qayyum, Chairman of Pakistan Steel Mills
Corporation, around 50 per cent of the some 13,000 employees would
"accept golden handshakes." If the chairman is right then the GoP will pay
back an amount of Rs7 billion, leaving the treasury with Rs14.68 billion. Of
the Rs14.68 billion left with the treasury, the GOP has already deposited a
post-dated cheque in the amount of Rs7.67 billion to clear off past liabilities.
That leaves the treasury with Rs7.01 billion. Of the Rs7.01 billion, the
central board of revenue (CBR) has waived off taxes in the amount of
Rs1.82 billion leaving -- mathematically speaking -- the treasury with Rs5.19
billion.
For the benefit of the buyer, PSMC has an inventory of 'stores and spares'
valued at Rs.1.86 billion. For the benefit of the buyer, PSMC has 'stock-in-
trade' valued at Rs9 billion. For the further benefit of the buyer, PSMC has a
bank balance of Rs8.880 billion (as of Balance Sheet dated December 31,
2005). Its total current assets are valued at Rs21.78 billion; a wholesome
Rs100 million over and above the price paid by the buyer (remember, the
buyer has acquired 75 per cent shares).
Now a bird's eye view of how efficient our government machinery really is:
The bidding for PSMC took place on March 30. The board of the
privatisation commission approved it on March 31 (the board consist of the
chairman, the secretary and six other members; one-third of the members
constitute a quorum). The same day the board forwarded a summary to the
cabinet committee on privatisation (CCOP). The CCOP met and approved
the sale the same day. The same day, CCOP authorised the privatisation
commission to issue a letter of approval (LOA) to the buyer. The same day,
an LOA was handed over to the buyer.
They said, "We will abolish the National Security Council after coming into
power as it has no constitutional status and will launch nationwide protest
demonstration against government’s lavish spending".
They demanded the apex court to take suo motto action on the privatization
of Habib Bank and Stock Exchange Scandal as well.
Senator Ishaq Dar said, "I have expressed similar reservations regarding
Habib Bank on the floor of the Senate. $ 382 million is not the price value of
Habib Bank. The Bank’s one-fourth price was Rs 12 billion. The price
should have been $ 600 million. I said it at the Senate’s floor".
Giving details he said, "Due to adjournment of the Senate the approval letter
was issued in a hurry. After receiving lesser price from UBL, Habib Bank
was privatized. We have seen in the form of tax refund Habib Bank received
Rs 9 billion and 800 million last year still the bank was privatized at a throw
away price".
"In the 52 years till 1999, $ 1926 billion were the total amount of loans and
in the last seven years the present government has taken loans amounting to
$ 814 billion", he added.
It may be recalled that Etisalat had been declared successful bidder after it
outbid China Mobile and Sing Tel by offering US$ 2.6 billion for acquisition
of 26 percent stake of PTCL.
Then bidder backed out. The government secretly negotiated the deal.
Many concessions wee given to new management/bidder. One such
unfair concession is that payment will be made in next five years rather
than in one years as agreed earlier.
The details are still secret in the ‘ larger national interest.’
By Irfan Shahzad
With each and every passing day that is taking us closer to the end of this
month, the clouds of uncertainty are darkening over the possible take-over
(or in the worst case otherwise) of Pakistan Telecommunication Company
Limited (PTCL) by Etisalat, the UAE’s telecom giant that gave the highest
bid for it in June bidding. The extended last date given to the company for
depositing remaining 90 of the bid money is October 28.
Huge claims were being made and people were being convinced to believe
that it was an historic moment. It really was. Though still signed just on
paper, the deal was single largest in history of Pakistan.
Concluded on initial time framework by last month, it could well have been
the largest transaction ever made in Pakistan. However, it has not
materialized yet. The result is that privatization authorities, again including
the minister himself, are reportedly trying their best to avoid the
representatives of media. Why? The answer is not hard to come by. They
doubtlessly have little to tell and explain.
Etisalat says there are some “serious issues” to be discussed, before putting
the seal on the deal. It is being argued by some that it will be least possible
for Etisalat to let the deal fall flat, citing good relations between UAE and
Pakistan, and its outward longer term expansion plans. One should always
hope for the best, but it is needless to stress that in economic deals, profits
and capital gains are the real decisive force.
In fact, it has not been a smooth sailing since the bidding was held and the
second thoughts of sheikhs are an open secret. As such, full payment by
Etisalat and handing over and taking over of Pakistan’s largest company
should have been completed by August 28, 2005. The final date kept moving
ahead. And after its CEO’s meetings with higher ups in Islamabad recently,
the company has now been given the date of October 28 to deposit the
remaining money and take over PTCL.
Despite this extension one can not say for sure what is going to follow on
this regard. This is thus becoming second similar episode after Kunooz al-
Watan Group of Saudi Arabia disappeared after bidding highest price for
Karachi Electric Supply Corporation, apparently because of some differences
on billing system of corporation.
The uncertain environment caused by it is already taking its toll. KSE index
and investors of PTCL shares have been hit. It is however good to note that
PC has been able to move ahead with privatization of Musthkam Cement,
Bolan Textile’s machinery and 17 EoIs have been received for Pakistan Steel
Mills.
Secretary PC was quoted as explaining that the deal with Etisalat was a big
one and some issues may arise in such big deals. He seems absolutely true.
But even if the process comes to finalization after the delay that has already
been caused, by one reason or other, the near repetition of Kunooz episode
by Etisalat poses some critical questions.
About seven million acres of the total is agricultural land and has an
estimated worth of Rs700 billion. Interestingly, only about 100,000 acres are
directly controlled by the armed forces and its subsidiary companies, the
Fauji Foundation, the AWT and the Bahria Foundation, and distributed
amongst serving and retired personnel. The remainder was given (at highly
subsidised rates) to army personnel as awards to be used for their personal
gratification.
Granting agricultural land as a reward to individuals is a tradition
inherited from the British. Following the principle of rewarding the 'faithful,'
the Alienation of Land Act specifically stipulated allocation of 10 per cent of
colonised land to the armed forces. This process of land development was
incorporated later in another law known as the Colonisation of Land Act,
1912, which was updated by the Pakistan government in 1965.
For decades, land has been transferred to military personnel under the
aforementioned law. The military was given 10 per cent of the
approximately nine million acres of land reclaimed due to the construction of
the Kotri, Guddu and Ghulam Mohammad barrages in Sindh. The
government also gave land to some senior civil bureaucrats, who were the
military regime's partners. Some of the prominent beneficiaries of the land
reclamation scheme from the armed forces included General Ayub Khan
(247 acres), General Muhammad Musa (250 acres), and Maj. General Umrao
Khan (246 acres).
After the military's takeover in October 1958, more land was allotted to army
officers in the Guddu Barrage area. Also, agricultural land was given in the
Punjab. What is even more important, however, is the fact that the land
allotted to military officers was developed with foreign aid - military and
economic aid from the US. Reportedly, the finance minister of Punjab,
Nawab Iftikhar Hussain Mamdot, justified the use of foreign aid for land
development because the money was meant for the army.
The military's control of land feeds the largest social injustice in the
country: widespread poverty. Like the feudal class, the military has been
known to use its power to redistribute land amongst its own without any
regard for the country's poor ethnic populations. In Bahawalpur, there are
instances when land developed through years of hard work by landless
peasants has been snatched away for distribution to the military bureaucracy.
In the tehsil of Nawazabad, the government awarded about 2,500 acres to
various military personnel. Hundreds of landless peasants were evicted from
state lands after occupying it for years without incident. In an interview,
these peasants protested against being evicted from the land they had
partially developed and reclaimed from the desert without even a fair
hearing. When the peasants took their case to court, junior military officers
threatened them, ridiculed the law and advised the peasants that even the
courts could not save them from the army's authority. To the villagers of
Nawazabad, there was no difference between the dominant feudal lords and
the praetorian military. One local woman bitterly demanded, "If there is no
place for us here then [the authorities] should put us on a truck and drop us
in India."
The case of Nawazabad is not an anomaly. Other places and people
have also experienced the use of force by the military to obtain land for
personal or operational purposes. In Yunisabad, near Karachi, the Pakistan
Navy took forcible possession of the floating jetty - and the land on which it
was built - that belonged to the village and was used to transport locals,
especially the sick. For villagers from nearby Shamspir, the jetty was their
only access point to land. A writ petition was filed with the Sindh High
Court against the "illegal act of the navy" and several letters were written to
the district administration highlighting human rights abuses by the PN.
Across the country, there are many examples of the military
wielding absolute authority to suppress landless peasants in areas where they
directly control the land. In Okara, a conflict ensued between local tenants
and the army that had unilaterally decided to change the terms of contract
from share-cropping to rent-in-cash. While share-cropping pertains to an
arrangement whereby the tenants share both the input and the output with the
owner or whoever controls the land, the rent-in-cash arrangement dictates
that land is cultivated in exchange for money, or rent. The additional benefit
of share-cropping to the tenant is that his right over the land is recognised by
law. The Okara farm tenants, who had resided on the land and were
responsible for tilling it, feared the new system of contract would empower
the army, who were not even the owners of the land, to displace the poor
tenants from their homes.
The Okara farms are part of the military farms group, Okara and
Renala, which comprise 16,627 acres of land consisting of two dairy farms,
seven military (oat-hay) farms and 22 villages. The prime proprietor is
evidently the Punjab government, which leases the land to other people or
institutions. In this particular case, the army had changed the terms of
contract for land it did not own. Moreover, the land lease had expired before
Partition in 1947 not to be renewed again. To enforce its authority, the
Rangers besieged the villages twice, imposed curfew, restricted freedom of
movement, stopped supply of medicine, food and vegetables, and used
numerous other pressure tactics. The report of Human Rights Watch has
detailed testimonials of villagers victimised by the military authorities that
were generally dismissive of the protest. Army personnel claimed that, rather
than being a human rights issue, this was a local law and order issue incited
by some NGOs.
Commenting on the Okara farms case, the Director-General, Inter-
Services Press Relations (ISPR), Maj. General Shaukat Sultan, said, "The
needs of the army will be decided by the army itself, and/or the government
will decide this. Nobody [else] has the right to say what the army can do
with 5,000 acres or 17,000 acres. The needs of the army will be determined
by the army itself."
However, the Okara incident was not an issue of how the army
determined the usage of its land. This, like many other cases, is about the
illegal use of military authority to change the legal nature of the land under
its control. The army follows the practice of changing the usage of A-1 land
specifically meant for operational purposes, to profit-making or for personal
gratification of the officer cadre and other elite. In the Punjab, farm land has
been turned into golf courses and residential housing schemes. Debates in
Parliament over the past couple of years have shown that some camping
grounds that the army had arbitrarily turned into golf courses were not
designed for public use, but only to please a select few.
In its official response to parliamentary questions regarding the misuse
of state land by the military, the Ministry of Defence (MoD) did not
challenge the army's authority. The ministry upheld the army's jurisdiction
over land under its control. This was done in other cases as well, such as the
conversion of the firing range in Nowshehra into a citrus farm. The army
vociferously defends its power over these assets and even controls
information regarding these agricultural assets.
Since 9/11, there has been a noticeable boom in the value of urban real
estate in the country. One of the largest beneficiaries, of course, is the
military, which has engaged in the practice of converting land titles from
state land to private property. It does this via two methods.
Firstly, there is the conversion of state land for private usage. A large
amount of state land designated as A-1 land in various cantonments is
distributed to military personnel. Here, it must be mentioned that the
beneficiaries are the officers and not the soldiers. The 27 housing schemes
built on state land in different parts of the country are reserved for the officer
cadre, not the jawans.
According to a report submitted by the MoD to the Senate,
about 78,292 square yards, or16.3 acres, totalling 130 residential plots, were
given to an equal number of officers in different cities in a period from
October 1999 to 2003.
The report highlighted a series of cases where residential plots were carved
out of state land meant for operational purposes. The cities included Karachi,
Lahore and Rawalpindi, as well as smaller towns such as Kharian and
Jhelum. The ranks of the beneficiaries varied from a full general to a captain.
Quantitatively, the distribution was fairly even, with senior, middle-ranking
and junior officers getting 46, 36 and 48 plots respectively. However, the
plot sizes for senior officers were much bigger than what junior officers
received. Generals of all categories received plots of 800 square yards, while
plot sizes for captains were less than 500 square yards.
The cantonment area in Lahore, which, up until the early 1980s,
comprised a large segment of army training grounds and firing ranges, was
almost entirely converted into a residential area. In effect, army exercise and
training grounds were converted from public to private use without the
consent of the government or the public for whose safety the land was
initially provided. This was, of course, done through an internal decision-
making process rather than through consultations with the government. In
fact, a major complaint is that decisions involving major military housing
projects are always made when Parliament is not in session.
Such arbitrary redistribution raises concerns about misuse of state
land, especially cantonment land. Major cantonments include Lahore
(12,000 acres), Karachi (12,000 acres), Rawalpindi (8,000 acres), Kamra
(3,500 acres), Taxila (2,500 acres), Peshawar (4,000 acres) and Quetta
(2,500 acres). The fear is that most will ultimately be commercialised. In
fact, Lahore, Karachi, Rawalpindi and Peshawar cantonments are no longer
restricted army areas. Much property has already been resold to civilians. In
Lahore, officers were given ownership of large residential properties in the
cantonment area. A conservative estimate of the worth of the cantonment
land in Karachi, Lahore, Peshawar and Quetta is approximately 300 billion
rupees.
The transfer of one portion of Karachi's National Stadium to the
Karachi Cantonment Board is a prime example of military land-grabbing.
The Corps Commander Mangla, Lt. General Tauqeer Zia, who was also the
Chairman of the Pakistan Cricket Control Board (PCCB), was responsible
for transferring the said land during his tenure as head of the PCCB. The
financial dividends were superb. A minimum investment of 600,000 rupees
netted a profit of about 15 million in a quick 60 to 90 days. Such
manipulative capacity is only available to the most influential institutions or
individuals in the country.
President Pervez Musharraf, however, claims that all is fair in real
estate and military governance: "So, what is the problem if they [the armed
forces] are contributing to town development here, or anywhere in Pakistan,
for that matter? In Lahore, in Rawalpindi - their output is the best. The
defence societies everywhere are the top societies of Pakistan…now, why
are we jealous of this? Why are we jealous if somebody gets a piece of land,
a kanal of land, cheap when it was initially, and because of the good work
done by the society, the price rises by 100 times, and the man then earns
some money. What is the problem? Why are we jealous of this? There's no
problem at all."
The project that would necessarily result in the eviction of about 250
families — who were allotted this land in Kot Pindi Das in Sheikhupura
against their lost property in India as a result of their migration in 1947 — is
a classic example of overstretching of the Punjab Land Acquisition Act of
1894 in the name of ‘public interest’. The law allows the government to take
over private land for public use against compensation at market rates but not
for private business, lawyers said.
Informed sources said the area under acquisition was beyond the needs of an
automobile plant because it also involved 57 acres for a golf course, 50.5
acres for a five-star hotel, a 478-acre race track and 99 acres for expansion.
Before the project could take off, the residents of Kot Pindi Das – who are
on the verge of being forced to hand over the land to Coastal Private Limited
for Rs484 million at the rate of Rs400,000 per acre — organised themselves
under a newly-formed ‘Anjuman Kissan Mutasrin-e-Mercedes-Benz’ to
protest in Lahore and Islamabad, says Rana Ehsanul Haq who is one of over
1,500 affected persons.
In brief, the government purchases 305 acres for Rs317.3 million for a public
sector university at about an average rate of Rs1 million per acre and now
compare it with 1,200 acres for just Rs484 million at an average rate of
Rs400,000 per acre for a business concern in the same area.
The owners of the land in Kot Pindi Das say that the government cannot
acquire land on behalf of a private venture and that, too, at less than half the
price. Mr Haq told Dawn that the market rate of the land ranged between
Rs3-4 million per acre because it is right by the motorway and would go up
further when a proposed inter-change is built at a later stage. Documents
suggest the prime minister’s secretariat has already directed the ministry of
communications to “allow and provide exit from the motorway (M-2) for
Daimler Chrysler by the National Highway Authority”.
“Why is the company not purchasing the land itself as a private transaction
as the Honda Company did recently?” asks Mr Haq. The land being acquired
by the government is much more than the requirement of an automobile
plant. Honda Company purchased just six acres of land in Sheikhupura for
its plant and the government had no role in that. The total cost of the piece of
land purchased by Honda was Rs12 million at a rate of about Rs2 million per
acre and that too a couple of years ago, he said.
Safdar Javed Syed, senior member revenue, Punjab, confirmed that the
district price assessment committee had approved a price that has been
challenged by some of the owners. The committee is led by the District
Officer Revenue and detailed comments from the committee have been
sought. He would not comment when asked if 1,200 acres were really
required for an automobile plant.
A senior revenue official, however, said the requirement of 1,200 acres was
sought by the Chief Minister’s Secretariat on the request of the federal
government and the relevant provincial authorities were required to
determine the price and complete the acquisition process. The physical
acquisition would start upon the receipt of Rs484 million from Coastal-
Mercedes joint venture, he said.
On July 19, this correspondent once again contacted the BOI secretary,
Jehangir Bashar, and asked about the whole size of the investment, its
components including the hotel, golf course, etc and the land requirement.
He promised to provide the relevant information and said one of his officers
would get back with the information. An official did subsequently establish
contact but only with the information that the minister of state was expected
to return in three to four days and a meeting would be arranged then. He
expressed his inability to be of greater help.
The group would set up its plant on 1,200 acres near Sheikhupura provided
by the government. The investment would create 5,000 jobs directly and
indirectly, said Mr Ghumman at a press conference.
He said 100 per cent investment, and all this is foreign investment, would be
made by the Coastal Private Limited and Daimler-Chrysler had no direct
investment. The German giant, he said, would provide engines and technical
know-how of the plant and the costly Mercedes trucks, buses and E and C
class cars would be marketed by Coastal under licence from the German
firm.
He confirmed that Coastal and Mercedez firms have not yet signed any final
agreement but have exchanged feasibility studies and initial MOU. He said
the first truck would roll out from the plant latest by April next year and
Pakistan army’s National Logistic Cell, Frontier Works Organisation and the
army itself would be the major clients. “NLC alone has committed to
purchase about 300-400 trucks every year for the next five to six years,” he
said, adding the plant would produce 1,000 trucks on a yearly basis with a
single shift that could be increased to 2,000 or more with double shifts.
He said the company would achieve 50 per cent localisation in two years and
was expected to start production of cars after three years. He said a
delegation of Daimler-Chrysler was expected to visit Pakistan later this
month. He said Coastal Private was registered locally with majority
shareholding of Sheikh Yousaf Mohammed Najibi of the UAE, whose
Coastal Trading & Contracting Company LLC, Dubai, is a big company of
the Gulf.
He claimed that in addition to a number of real estate, stock market and other
investments, Sheikh Najibi’s investments in multi-billion-dollar Dubai
Sports City (DSC) were higher than Abdul Rahman Bukhatir’s. This,
however, could not be verified through an examination of the DSC website.
About the debt-equity ratio, he said the whole $1 billion would be foreign
direct investment with no local financing and hence it did not matter whether
the amount was raised through foreign banks in the form of loan or equity.
The source confirmed that Coastal had also heard about the golf course,
housing and hotel facilities, but claimed that his company could not do so
under any agreement with the provincial government or the German auto-
firm. He said the process for acquisition of about 1,050 acres was about to
begin but agreed that his company would not need more than 600 acres.
Raja Shafqat Abbasi, a senior lawyer and member of the Punjab Assembly,
said the government could not acquire land for private commercial projects
or private housing societies under the land acquisition act. However, the
Punjab government had adopted it as policy to forcibly take over 20 per cent
land for housing societies provided such societies already possessed 80 per
cent of land (By Khaleeq Kiani; 22.7.6 Dawn)
RAILWAY ENGINES
Weep Pakistan, weep
On Friday May 26 a sub-committee of the public accounts committee of the
National Assembly took up investigations into the irregularities in the
purchase of Chinese locomotives for $100 million. The locomotives were
purchased in 2001 when a retired three-star general was the minister in
charge, another retired three-star general was chairman railways and a
former two-star general was general manager railways.
The issue was first raised in the Senate last year upon which the prime
minister ordered an inquiry. Investigations revealed that the purchase had
been sanctioned despite the fact that the locomotives were unfit for Pakistani
rail tracks --- they were too heavy. No international tenders had been floated
either. Even the railway officials who attended the meeting said that it was a
wrong decision. The chairman railways reportedly said: "If I were secretary
Pakistan Railways at the time I would not have signed the agreement".
According to Rauf Klasra's report in The News of May 27 the chairman
railways also named the three generals involved and then challenged: "If you
are serious in investigating the issue please summon them and proceed as
you like".
A day before the sub-committee had taken a kinder view of another case of a
questionable deal that involved retired military men including a brigadier. A
132 KV grid station had been set up at Kamra in 1995 at a cost of 64 million
rupees. The committee learnt that the auditor-general was not satisfied
because a similar 132 KV grid station set up at Taxila in 1994 had cost only
39 million rupees. The AG had also objected that the contract had not been
awarded through open bidding in violation of government rules. Despite
evidence and objections by the AG, the sub-committee chose to take a
milder view and refrained from referring the case to NAB.
When the sub-committee took up the case the defence ministry admitted that
rules had been violated but insisted that the violation was in 'good faith'. The
sub-committee however did not agree and refused to accept the 'good faith'
plea. The chairman of the sub-committee Riaz Fityana, a non-serviceman,
deserves to be commended for refusing to settle the case but this did not
diminish the audacity of the defence ministry to invoke once again 'good
faith' and seek exemption.
The NAB law is applicable only to political leaders and civilians accused of
corruption. Serving military officers are exempt from it because, it is
claimed, the military has its own internal accountability mechanism. "We
live in sweet prison because of the manual of the Pakistan Military Law
during our service" is how a former NAB chairman, a three-star general as
well, stoutly defended exemption to military officers in an interview
published in this newspaper on June 20, 2005, after he had retired both from
NAB and the military.
The civilians and politicians hauled by NAB for real or imagined crimes are
also promptly sent to jail. Investigations and proofs follow later at a pace
determined by NAB. The accused has to prove his innocence. In an
interview with The News on April 24, 2000 the then chairman justified the
'onus of proof' with great relish thus: "Yes, it does mean that the corrupt
should prove himself innocent".
But five years later in June 2005 as chairman of the Fauji Foundation, the
same former NAB chief was directed to appear before the defence committee
of the Senate to answer serious allegations in the sale of Khoski Sugar Mills
that had come to light in the National Assembly in reply to a question asked
by a female MNA belonging to the treasury benches. He refused saying that
the Fauji Foundation was a private concern and that the Senate body had no
business to ask him any questions. The yardstick of proving innocence
appeared to have changed now as the hunted was a former senior military
officer. "Judge not so that ye shall not be judged".
Retired military officers, though not exempt from NAB, have also been
exempted from effective accountability through the device of unending
investigations. In reply to a Senate question on December 5, 2003, NAB
named fourteen uniformed officers working in civil departments that also
included one ex-lieutenant general as being 'under investigation for
accumulating assets beyond means'. Three years later when NAB was asked
again about the status of the case it replied: "Investigations are still
continuing". Meanwhile the accused roam free.
To these familiar devices has now been added yet another device, 'good
faith'. True, that 'honest mistakes' and 'good faith' must be recognised as
basic to the concept of justice with compassion or 'adl bil ihsan'. But it seems
that in the Islamic Republic only former generals are entitled to 'adl bil
ihsan'.
Those who seek reprieve on grounds of 'honest mistake' and 'good faith' must
possess very high standards of morality. In 1995 a scandal broke out about
the American chief of naval operations, Admiral James Boorda. The case
was about whether the admiral should have won a small bronze star that cost
less than a dollar. His supporters said he was entitled to wear it. His
detractors however insisted that technically he was not entitled to wear it.
Appearing before inquiry committee Boorda called it an 'honest mistake'.
The inquiry committee agreed that Boorda had made a mistake in wearing
the medal even if it was an 'honest' one. The admiral who had a great sense
of honour saw a personal shame and dishonour in it and shot himself with his
service gun.
Even the auditors of the Auditor General of Pakistan, led by Zafrullah Khan,
Rashed Ahmed Saleh and Sheikh Naseer, who otherwise never spare
politicians at the time of their accountability by the PAC, remained silent
and disinterested in the meeting while the scam was being settled.
The swindle was first blown wide open in the Senate and later discussed in
the PAC of the National Assembly. It was reported in the Senate that
Pakistan had imported defective locomotives from China. An audit report
also confirmed the allegations of senators and the issue was finally referred
to the PAC, which constituted a sub-committee to decide the issue.
Federal Railways Secretary Shakeel Durrani, who appeared before the sub-
committee, got the whole scam settled within half-an-hour into the
proceedings. However, he did not mince words when asked to tell the names
of those who were actually responsible for the faulty multibillion-rupee deal.
“Sir, Lt-Gen (Retd) Javed Ashraf Qazi was railways minister, Lt-Gen Saeed
Zafar was secretary railways and Gen Butt was GM Railways at that time. If
you are serious about further probing the issue, please summon them and
proceed as you like,” said Durrani.
But the two members of the PAC sub-committee, MNA Lt-Col Ghulam
Rasool Sahi and MNA Asia Azeem, did not have the courage to accept the
secretary’s offer to summon these top guns to hear their versions on the
issue. They also remained silent when Durrani admitted that the deal struck
with China in 2001 was not an ideal one.
Durrani also admitted that there were many lapses in the deal and had he
been the secretary in 2001 when the deal had been cut, he might have re-
advertise the tender to get more viable bids for the import of railway engines.
But he too justified the deal with China on the grounds that after 9/11 things
were quite different as no country was prepared to help Pakistan. He said
that in the given situation the only option left with Pakistan was to seek a
loan from China to buy engines, as the condition of the railways engines was
very bad.
Surprisingly, not only did the PAC members get convinced about this
unusual plea, the auditors remained tightlipped and did not point out that the
deal with China was struck much earlier than the 9/11 incidents.
The railways secretary claimed that the deal was struck in “good faith” by
“these concerned gentlemen” who were then running the show at the
Railways Ministry. The PAC members by accepting his plea about the
retired military generals, who took the faulty decision, said: “OK gentlemen,
we accept your plea ‘in good faith’ and settle the whole scam.”
The AGP auditors also did not raise any objection, which they usually do
when such kinds of words are said in the committee by other ministries.
“Although there are serious lapses in the deal as admitted by the secretary,
we are still ready to accept the plea in good faith and settle this scam once
and for all,” remarked Lt-Col Sahi. (Courtesy: Rauf Klasra, 27 May
2006: the News)
CARTELS
Public money for private pockets; consumer rip-off on an unprecedented
scale. First came the oil companies cartel. Then the automobile cartel
followed by the cement cartel, the sugar cartel and the stockbrokers cartel.
Where will it all end? Pakistan's oil cartel has ten members; Shell, Caltex,
Attock Petroleum, Total, Bosicor, PSO, Attock Refinery, National Refinery,
Pak-Arab Refinery and Pakistan Refinery. The cartel's original platform: Oil
Companies Advisory Committee (OCAC). Under pressure, our policymakers
have replaced the OCAC with OGRA (Oil & Gas Regulatory Authority). To
determine oil prices OCAC used an overly biased formula tilted in favour of
the OCAC members. OGRA now determines the price of oil but uses the
same formula.
As is always the case with cartels, the members are all interlinked through
cross-ownerships. Attock Group of Companies owns Attock Refinery,
Attock Petroleum and National Refinery. Shell, PSO and Caltex jointly own
Pakistan Refinery. Total and Pak-Arab Refinery are partners. The cartel
supplied the Pakistani market with inferior quality diesel and charged a
higher price. Under OCAC, oil marketing companies commission, retailers
margin and inland freight were all jacked up. Ten of Pakistan's richest
companies managed additional inflows amounting to Rs38 billion a year.
Ten are making tons of money. The other 165 million are getting ripped off.
Then came Attock Cement, Bestway Cement, Cherat Cement, D.G. Khan
Cement, Dandot Cement, Fecto, Gharibwal, Javedan, Kohat, Lucky, Maple
Leaf and Pioneer. The cement cartel managed to jack up the price of cement
from Rs260 per 50 kg bag a few months ago to over Rs400 per 50 kg bag (a
number of foreign suppliers had offered to sell at Rs125 per 50 kg bag). As a
consequence, after-tax profits of listed cement producers have gone up by
whopping 86 per cent.
The deadly sugar cartel made its debut a mere few months ago and managed
to take sugar from Rs20 per kg to over Rs40 per kg. Intriguingly, the sugar
sector has an installed capacity to produce 6.7 million tons of sugar while the
total annual demand for sugar stands at no more than 3.8 million tons. Our
policymakers have a vested interest in the price of sugar and, once again, the
cartel is making tons of money and the other 165 million consumers are
getting ripped off.
Where in the world can stockbrokers cough out enough cash to buy steel
mills and banks? Answer: only in Pakistan. Arif Habib Securities, Jehangir
Siddiqui & Company and Aqeel Karim Dhedi Securities now have more
cash than the worth of Pakistan's steel mills and banks put together. In
collusion with policymakers, they are the regulator as well as the regulated.
On May 29, 2006, Dr Salman Shah, adviser to the prime minister on finance,
announced that the Monopoly Control Authority was being "transformed
into a 'Competition Commission' to be effective from the fiscal year 2006-
07." The 'competition commission' is aimed at "promoting competition in
various sectors of the economy and will have legal authority and teeth so that
when it acts, it makes a difference." Monopoly Control Authority or a
competition commission -- what's the difference? OCAC or OGRA?
Our real problem is conflict of interest -- our regulators are the regulated.
People in positions of trust have competing personal interest. Policy makers
have personal business interests and policies are made to serve those
interests. Public and private interests have collided. The two must now be
separated.
Conflict of interest can be avoided in two ways -- disclosure and
disqualification. A model to be followed is the Political Reform Act and the
Fair Political Practices Commission (FPPC) of California. Under the
Political Reform Act, elected public officials must disclose personal interests
that "might be affected while they are performing their official duties."
Additionally, a politician "may not take any part in a governmental decision
in which he or she has a disqualifying conflict of interest." Under one of its
sections, no "public official shall make, participate in making or in any way
attempt to use his official position to influence a governmental decision in
which he knows or has reason to know he has a financial interest".
Ever wondered why our president sees prosperity all around? It's the cartels
that have accumulated mountains of wealth (all at the cost of the consumer).
And, cartels have direct access to the presidency, the consumer doesn't.
Ever wondered why prosperity is not trickling down? Answer: the cartels
have kept all the prosperity to themselves. Every wondered why our macro-
economic indicators are on a high but micro aren't?
Ever wondered why a few cartels have managed to enrich private pockets at
the expense of 165 million consumers? Here is why: Our military-led
government is dependent on a democratic facade within which there are
members out to make tons of money. There clearly is conflict of interest.
The government is clearly being blackmailed. The consumer is clearly being
ripped-off. It's the Rule of Cartels.
Ever wondered who is really ruling the country? Ever wondered who our
real rulers are? ( Dr Farrukh Saleem: July 9, 2006, the News)
Per capita income has doubled in the past four years. Last year, of the 184
member countries of the IMF, Pakistan’s rate of economic growth was
second only to China. The rate of growth in our large-scale manufacturing
sector is at a 30-year high. Construction activity is at a 17-year high. In
Islamabad, a kanal of land has gone from $100,000 to $1,000,000. The
aggregate value of the KSE-listed shares has gone up from $7 billion in 2002
to $50 billion.
Is Pakistan richer now than ever before? Price of shares has gone up and the
price of land has gone up. Yes, Pakistanis who own urban land are richer
now than ever before. Yes, Pakistanis who own KSE-listed stocks are richer
today than ever before. Remember, Pakistan does not become rich based on
urban land prices going up or the KSE-100 Index breaking all records.
Pakistan will only become rich when the real price of labour goes up
(nominal wages minus inflation). And, that hasn’t happened.
The other thing that hasn’t happened is the ‘trickling down’ of wealth and
prosperity (‘trickle down economics’, according to one definition, advocates
support of businesses that allows them to flourish and that this will
eventually benefit middle- and lower-income people, in the form of
increased economic activity and reduced unemployment).
Ever wondered why the wealthy in our economy have become even
wealthier but that wealth hasn’t trickled down? Here is why? Free markets
fail. Market failure occurs when “market forces do not serve the perceived
public interest”. Market failure results in “undue concentration of economic
power, growth of unreasonable monopoly power and unreasonably
restrictive trade practices”. Similarly, ‘government failure’ is when a
government fails to keep the market from failing.
Leading free markets, for reasons to keep the market from failing, have put
in place elaborate infrastructure composed of ‘competition regulators’,
‘competition commissions’ and ‘fair political practices commissions’. These
‘competition regulators’ regulate commercial activity, prohibit cartels,
enforce competition laws and provide consumer protection. Fair political
practices commissions keep elected public officials from “taking part in a
government decision in which he or she has a disqualifying conflict of
interest.”
Ever wondered why wealth is not trickling down? Answer: We have now
become a ‘cartel economy’.
First came the oil cartel: Shell, Caltex, Attock Petroleum, Total, Bosicor,
PSO, Attock Refinery, National Refinery, Pak-Arab Refinery and Pakistan
Refinery. The Oil Companies Advisory Committee (OCAC), was their
platform. The OCAC determined the price of oil whereby ‘cartel members’
made tons of money while the other 165 million got ripped off.
Then came the automobile cartel: Indus Motor Company, Honda Atlas and
Pak Suzuki Motors enriched private pockets at public expense. The cement
cartel: Attock Cement, Bestway Cement, Cherat Cement, D.G. Khan
Cement, Dandot Cement, Fecto, Gharibwal, Javedan, Kohat, Lucky, Maple
Leaf and Pioneer.
The stock brokers cartel: Arif Habib securities, Aqeel Karim Dhedi,
Motiwala securities, Jahangir Siddiqui, Atlas Invest and DJM Securities
(The official Stock Market Review Taskforce calls them the ‘badla
providers’). Not to forget, the deadly sugar cartel.
“The last orders on my table, when I was removed from my post on Eid day,
was the appointment of forensic investigators to probe the few big brokers
held responsible by the task force (for the crash),” Mr Hassan told reporters
after presenting the so-called white paper to the National Assembly’s
Standing Committee on Finance and Revenue.
The team will be presenting its report to the committee within 10-12 weeks
after which those found responsible might be brought to book. Their names
are also likely to be put on the Exit Control List.
“They (the government) have no other option but to continue with the
reforms I had initiated but was not allowed to complete. The moral pressure
on them is building and compelling them to get hold of the big fish.
Otherwise, I fear form will prevail over substance,” said Mr Hassan while
commenting on the committee’s decision to proceed with the probe.
MNAs from the ruling party and opposition quoted Mr Hassan as saying in
the meeting that he would never retreat from his stand that he had not been
allowed to go ahead with reforms.
The former SECP chairman asked how could he get hold of those powerful
brokers who, he alleged, had access to the prime minister.
During the nine-hour meeting, Dr Hassan faced tough questions from the
Minister of State for Finance Omar Ayub Khan and Prime Minister’s
Adviser Dr Salman Shah, apparently because he had mentioned their names
in letters he had sent to the prime minister and accused them of pressurising
him not to replace Carry-over Transaction with margin financing, one of the
main causes of the crash.
When Dr Hassan was busy answering journalists’ questions after the meeting
in the committee room, a government official approached him and asked him
to leave as Dr Salman Shah, Omar Ayub and incumbent SECP chairman
Raziur Rehman were to hold a news conference.
“Dear, you people have invited me to this meeting,” said Dr Hassan to the
official while leaving the room.
Ruling party MNA Kashmala Tariq told reporters that there was a threat to
Dr Hassan’s life because he had taken on some powerful people.
For the first 50 minutes of the meeting, Dr Hassan was not allowed to speak
and it was only after a protest by opposition MNAs that he was given an
opportunity to do so.
SECP chairman Raziur Rehman was asked by Dr Hassan and Ms Tariq why
had the reform process had been stopped and why task force’s
recommendations had not been implemented, which resulted in another
market crash.
Insiders told Dawn that at one point Mr Omar Ayub said he had taken strong
exception to Ms Tariq’s remarks when she said “our prime minister also
intervenes in our stock market”. Ms Tariq was replying to Mr Omar Ayub’s
comment that even the US president had intervened in the stock market on
various occasions.
Former KSE chairman Yasin Lakhani and Aqeel Karim Dhedi (AKD) were
present on the occasion.
The members demanded resignation of the prime minister for his alleged
intervention in the stock market affairs and links with some brokers, first
stopping the SECP chairman from taking action against manipulators and
then sending him home when he initiated reforms.
“During Shaukat Aziz’s era, first as the finance minister and later as the
prime minister, the country’s stock market has crashed in 2000, 2001, 2002,
2005 and May 2006. Therefore, we demand resignation of the prime
minister,” Mr Pirzada said.
They said the committee had decided that the stock market reform process
must go on. ( Sher Baz Khan: Dawn: 7-6-2006)
Sugar Crisis
The power of sugar cartel is evident from the fact that even the National
Accountability Bureau had to shelve its probe into the sugar crisis within
three days of its initiation.
The cartel can increase prices, exploit farmers and break rules and seem to
be above the law. The millers had procured sugarcane at an average price of
Rs60 per 40kg. Because of the miller’s persistent failure to pay farmers for
their produce, they had switched to other crops.
Annual demand for sugar in Pakistan is 3.6 million tons. Our sugar mills (79
in number) have an installed capacity to produce 6.7 million tons of sugar
annually; a massive excess crushing capacity over our annual demand.
This year production was 2.6 million tons plus a stock of 0.708 million tons,
(not included are unreported production of sugar plus the buffer market stock
of 0.5 million tons) leaves a shortage of 0.3 million tons that could have
easily been bridged.
The sugar cartel managed to take sugar from Rs20 per kg to over Rs40 per
kg. Why is sugar then being sold at a price 100 percent over last year’s? Our
policy makers tell us that the international price of sugar has gone up. That is
certainly true. What they don’t tell us is that the price of sugar in Pakistan
has had no historical correlation with the international price. In 2003-04,
when the international price of sugar was the equivalent of Rs13.80 per kg
(landed) we were paying Rs19.26 per kg. Nine years ago, when the
international price of sugar was the equivalent of Rs9 per kg we were paying
Rs21.46 per kg
The Economic Coordination Committee (ECC) had allowed 20 mills to
import 400,000 tons of duty-free raw sugar to control runaway domestic
prices, which had climbed to Rs42 per kg. The production cost of purified
sugar from raw sugar was Rs21-22 per kg but the millers not only sold the
sugar at a price exceeding Rs42, but paid sales tax at the rate of Rs29 per kg.
Why did the consumers not benefit from import of raw sugar? Why were the
rich and powerful (sugar) mill-owners allowed to pocket huge profits
without any check. PAC observed: “This is the most dismal response from
the government we have ever come across”.
The millers concealed the record of 314,000 tons of carry over sugar. Last
year, the Trading Corporation of Pakistan had procured 400,000 tons of
sugar from various mills and the stock was still lying with the sugar mills.
When the crisis ensued, the mills had refused to hand the sugar over to the
TCP despite the latter having paid the money a year ago. The millers had
told the TCP that they would release sugar if all their bank loans were
waived or if they were allowed to stop paying farmers.
The ban on construction of new sugar mills under the Sugar Factory Control
Act 1950 is being openly flouted and even after the imposition of the ban,
mills were set up in Rahimyar Khan, Khanpur, Jhang, Chishtian and
Rajanpur districts.
Why is sugar then being sold at a price 100 percent over last
year’s? Our policy makers tell us that the international price of sugar
has gone up. That is certainly true. What they don’t tell us is that the
price of sugar in Pakistan has had no historical correlation with the
international price. In 2003-04, when the international price of sugar
was the equivalent of Rs13.80 per kg (landed) we were paying
Rs19.26 per kg. Nine years ago, when the international price of sugar
was the equivalent of Rs9 per kg we were paying Rs21.46 per kg
(source: Pakistan Sugar Mills Association Annual Report 2005).
The cartel suck in Rs 9 billion annually into their coffers by providing low
quality diesel at exorbitant price through their refineries. In Europe, diesel
contains 0.3 percent sulphur. Our refineries produce a far inferior diesel with
sulphur content of 1 percent at the international price of superior diesel. The
difference in price between the two diesels ranges from $18 per ton to $20
per ton. Considering that Pakistani consumers buy 7.86 million tons of diesel
fuel a year the refineries make an extra Rs9 billion every year. The Oil and
Gas Regulatory Authority (OGRA) can intervene on behalf of 162 million
Pakistani consumers which could bring the price of diesel by Rs1 a litter just
on this account alone.
Six years ago, Shell, Caltex, Attock Petroleum, Total, Bosicor and PSO use
to make Rs0.204 per litter as ‘Oil Marketing Companies Commission’.
OCAC has jacked the same up a hefty 669 percent. In 1999, Oil Marketing
Companies made some Rs2 billion as ‘Commissions’ and the same
‘Commissions’ now stands at a colossal Rs14.7 billion.
Retailers were allowed Rs0.163 per litter as ‘retailer margin’ in 1999; the
same has since gone up by 544 percent. Thanks to OCAC, retailers have
sucked in an additional Rs10.53 billion through the sale of diesel and motor
gasoline.This results in a gross additional inflow of Rs38 billion a year into
the treasuries of ten companies, namely Shell, Caltex, Attock Petroleum,
Total, Bosicor, PSO, Attock Refinery, National Refinery, Pak-Arab Refinery
and Pakistan Refinery. The retail price of diesel can be brought down by a
hefty Rs4 per litter by adjusting just the above four factors.
OCAC has served its ten members exceptionally well. In 2000, Attock
Refinery made a paltry Rs56 million in Profit after Taxation. In 2005, profits
stood at a whopping Rs1.2 billion. National Refinery made Rs707 million in
1999 and Rs2 billion in 2004-05. Pakistan Refinery made Rs733 million in
2004 and Rs1.7 billion in 2005. Intriguingly, some 60 percent of all gains
made by OCAC members have been from ‘inventory gains’ (when OCAC
increases the price of oil).
HIGH OIL PRICE DUE TO IMPORT REGULATORY DUTY AND
GST
In 1999, there was no ‘import regulatory duty’ on diesel and neither was
there GST. The government now collects Rs21 billion in the form of import
regulatory duty and Rs35 billion as GST, and that converts to around Rs6 per
litter (of diesel).
Who is ripping us off?
Six years ago, Shell, Caltex, Attock Petroleum, Total, Bosicor and
PSO use to make Rs0.204 per litter as ‘Oil Marketing Companies
Commission’. OCAC has jacked the same up a hefty 669 percent. In
1999, Oil Marketing Companies made some Rs2 billion as
‘Commissions’ and the same ‘Commissions’ now stands at a colossal
Rs14.7 billion.
Retailers are also doing quite well. In 1999, retailers were allowed
Rs0.163 per litter as ‘retailer margin’. The same has since gone up by
544 percent. Thanks to OCAC, retailers have sucked in an additional
Rs8.33 billion and Rs2.2 billion through the sale of diesel and motor
gasoline, respectively.
Ten of the richest companies are getting even richer and that
too at the cost of 162 million Pakistanis; foxes are doing it to the
chicken and making money doing it.
In 1999, there was no ‘import regulatory duty’ on diesel and
neither was there GST. The government now collects Rs21 billion in
the form of import regulatory duty and Rs35 billion as GST, and that
converts to around Rs6 per litter (of diesel).
Ten are making tons of money. The other 162 million of us are getting
ripped off (Dr. Farrukh Saleem: The News
PAK AMERICAN
FERTILIZER
Fairness of PAFL Privatization questioned
Third highest bidder wants to be issued offer to take over the plant
Eight parties participated in pre bid meeting (i) Associated Group, Lahore
(ii) Bestway Cement Ltd. Islamabad (iii) Dawood HERCULES Chemicals
Ltd. Lahore (iv) Ibrahim Fibers Ltd. Faisalabad (v) Jahangir Siddiqui Capital
Markets Ltd. Karachi (vi) Kohinoor Textile Mills Ltd & Associates, Lahore
(vii) Nishat (Chunian) Ltd. Lahore; (vii) Pak Arab Fertilizers Pvt. Ltd.
Multan.
Ibrahim Group (of M/s Ibrahim Fibers Ltd. Faisalabad ) was decled the
highest bidder with an offer of Rs. 19 billion but it failed to make payment
within the stipulated time. Consequently next highest bidder M/s Asgard-9
(of Jahangir Siddiqui Capital Markets Ltd. Karachi) with a bid of Rs.16.1
billion were offered to take over. But not Azgard-9 too has defaulted.
It would be interest to not that M/s Azgard-9 were the second highest bidders
and they were made an offer to take over the PAFL plant after M/s Ibrahim
Group led by Sheikh Mumtaz Ahmed, the highest bidder, failed to make
payment of Rs.19 billion on time. M/s Azgard-9 immediately accepted the
offer and took over possession of PAFL.
Now M/s Azgard-9 too has defaulted on making payment of Rs.16.1 billion,
the amount of their bid. In all fairness following the law as applied in the
case of M/s Ibrahim Group, M/s Azgard-9 should be penalized with
confiscation of their earnest money and their request for an extension of
period for payment of the amount be straightaway rejected. Not only that the
third highest bidder be made the offer of negotiating for taking over the
plant.
After smelling some foul play and giving credence to reports that the
privatization commission was inclined towards doing favor to M/s Azgard-9
by extending the payment period, Saigol Group of Lahore has warned the
powers that be against any such favor and said that this would bring the
entire process of privatization and transparency into dispute.
While talking to the News from Lahore Tariq Syeed Saigol, Chairman M/s
KMLC whose group was the third highest bidder with an offer of Rs.13.7
billion, said that after coming to know of these developments he wrote to
Minister for Privatization Zahid Hamid on June 5 Asking him to issue offer
letter to his group under the law to negotiate for taking over the plant. He
warned that if concessions were given to Azgard-9 group, it would not be in
accordance with law and would go against the process of privatization.
He said we now feel that M/s KMLG should be issued the letter of offer.
This has raised suspicions in his mind and led Mr. Saigol to conclude in his
letter to PM that perhaps M/s Azgard-9 had been given the favor by allowing
him to make payment after some time instead of facing penalties.
He warned that in such a case it might deal a blow to privzation process and
tal claims of transparency.
on
Mega-Corruption Unlimited: after non-transparent
Privatization of PSM, Musharaf Regime’s case of back
door privatization – an another scam
It was just recently that the federal minister for privatization and
investment had made a statement in the National Assembly that the
PECO remains on the active list of privatization, and its Kot Lakhpat
works and Badami Bagh land would be put up for sale in the near
future.
PECO shareholding
Shares held by As on 30.6.2003 As on
30.6.2004
No of shares % No of
shares %
Government-owned 3,169,930 55.71
1,899,200 33.38
State Engineering Corporation 1,415,723 24.88
1,415,723 24.88
Banks, insurance and invest cos. 1,748,062 30.72
477,332 8.39
Others (custodian of enemy
property, adminstrator
abandoned properties, etc) 6,145 0.11
6,145 0.11
1. Some milestones:
a) 15th March, 2000
b) Aug-Sept 2003
CEMENT CRISIS
The cement factory owners with their monopoly increased the rates of
cement. Monopoly Control Authority is silent on the present increase in
cement rates and is not taking action on the unjustified raise. Duty free
import of cement from neighboring countries should be allowed to provide
cement on cheaper rates in the market and to save construction industry from
crises. A bag of cement in Pakistan is available at Rs. 300/- whereas in its
price in India and China is in the range from Rs. 100-150.
Mr Khan said it had now been established that the cement price hike was
unjustified but said no punitive action was considered against them because
the relevant summary had not proposed any action.
He said the ECC noted that “there was justification for increasing the price
of cement in Pakistan because there was no increase in input prices, no
increase in international cement prices and there was no extraordinary
demand in the country”.
(Dawn: 30-5-2006)
AGENCY RULE
ISLAMABAD: An elite intelligence agency of the country has ordered an
inquiry against some of its senior officers for misusing the organisation’s
muscles to kidnap a retired brigadier, his daughter-in-law and some teenaged
boys to make them an “example” for others over a petty playground fighting
among lads.
An official of the intelligence agency confided to The News that the event
that occurred in Islamabad’s I-8/4 sector on Saturday night had shocked even
the top bosses of the agency, who took immediate notice of the situation and
constituted a “board of inquiry” to identify those who acted like pharaohs
and misused the clout of the agency against ordinary citizens in their
personal matter.
The top boss of the agency was contacted in his residence but he was not in
the town to offer any comments on the incident that has also shocked many
living in the neighbourhood. Following a trivial playground fight between
teenage boys, including the son of an official of the intelligence agency in
Street 86 of sector I-8/4, houses in the old Faizabad locality were raided late
in the evening on Saturday last by armed men riding two separate cavalcades
of double cabins.
In Street 86, an ailing teenager, who had a hole in his heart and is waiting for
his heart surgery, was the target of the intelligence agency men. According
to witnesses, he was dragged out of his house, beaten black and blue, rolled
on the street and made to sit in one of the double cabins. His mother who
tried to save her ailing child too was pushed aside and even her shirt was
torn.
The boy’s grandfather, a retired brigadier and a decorated war hero, also
protested but he too was roughed up. Both the grandfather and the mother
tried to block the kidnapping of their child without having any idea of the
kidnappers. On this, they too were pushed into the double cabins that sped
away soon afterwards.
The mother and the boy were taken to the G-9 office of the agency, while the
retired brigadier in a separate cavalcade was taken to old Faizabad residential
area to identify the other “wanted” teenagers. There they got hold of the two
more boys from two different houses and immediately dispatched them to
the agency’s safe houses. However, because of the congested locality and
thick population three of the double cabins, including the one carrying the
retired brigadier were blocked by the protesting locals, who thrashed some of
the armed men held under siege by the local protesters.
Later hundreds of people, including the retired brigadier and fathers of the
other two boys, went to the I-9 police station, where they were pressurised
for a truce instead of insisting on filing an FIR, which was never registered.
On the other side the kidnapped lady of Street 86, her son and the other two
boys were released late in the night at different deserted locations after the
kidnappers realised that they had committed a blunder.
Late in the night the agency’s top bosses had also been contacted by some
well-connected relations of at least one of the victim — the retired brigadier,
who expressed their annoyance and displeasure over the incident and assured
justice to the victims.
While the intelligence agency has ordered a probe into the matter, father of
one of the teenage boys told this correspondent that had the grandson of the
retired brigadier not been involved in the sordid case, their sons (for being
ordinary folks) would have disappeared for months for unknown crime.
(By Ansar Abbasi: Tuesday, July 04, 2006: the News)
By Ansar Abbasi
Already the ISI top offices, perturbed by this incident, had constituted
a board of inquiry to fix responsibility. According to sources, a senior
official had actually ordered the illegal operation against helpless
civilians. Today, he visited Brigadier (retd) Muhammad Taj’s place
along with his wife to tender an apology after his son and others
allegedly beat up the retired brigadier’s son.
“My son wanders in the house, scared for his life and refuses to go
out even to play with his friends. He is scared that he might again be
hounded by ISI people if he goes out of the house. He even refuses
to answer the door bell.
“I assure you that respect for Army has not diminished even a little
bit and I still hold a uniform personnel in very high esteem. But
people like these who take impulsive actions would ultimately bring
bad name to such great institutions of this country.
“Mr President, I have been forced to approach you for solace because
by the response of this Court of Inquiry so far, doubts has started
creeping in my mind that only one victim is being provided justice. I
hope and pray you will rid this old man of this tension and take
proper action against the culprit. An aged father is approaching you
in the hope that he is able to face his family.” ( Monday, July 24,
2006: The News)
DESTRUCTION OF JUDICIARY
CJ suspended, escorted home: • Justice Iftikhar summoned by SJC on
13th for reference hearing • Ex-judges call it a blow to judiciary’s
independence; minister defends decision • Whither judicial activism?
By Nasir Iqbal
ISLAMABAD, March 9: In a highly dramatic move that has the potential to change the
course of judicial activism in the country, President General Pervez Musharraf on Friday
virtually suspended the Chief Justice of Pakistan, Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry,
and appointed the available senior-most judge, Justice Javed Iqbal, as the acting Chief
Justice of the Supreme Court.
The president’s orders came in the afternoon, and within minutes took the country by
storm. Many in the legal fraternity were shocked by the way the country’s top adjudicator
had been treated. Among them was the President of the Supreme Court Bar Association,
Munir A. Malik, who described it as a ‘blatant attack on the independence of the
judiciary’, and former chief justice Saeeduzzaman Siddiqui.
As speculations started to grip bar rooms and political circles about the fate of the
judiciary, and the impact of the move on other key issues, the acting chief justice was
sworn in by a brother judge, Justice Abdul Hameed Dogar, in an ‘uncharacteristically
simple ceremony’. The traditional fanfare that has been the highlight of such ceremonies
was missing and instead of the main hall of the Supreme Court, a small room on the third
floor of the judges’ block was chosen for the occasion.
The media persons and the accompanying cameras clearly outnumbered the officers of
the court at the ceremony as most of the brother judges (as they are mostly referred to by
their colleagues) were conspicuous by their absence. So was the Attorney General
Makhdoom Ali Khan, even though he was seen in precincts of the court house, and also
the veteran lawyer and Prime Minister's adviser, Sharifuddin Pirzada.
Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry's reaction was not known as since his "suspension" or
being made "non-functional" he had remained incommunicado. After his meeting with
President Musharraf, he remained inside the President camp office for a few hours, and
was later prevented from going to the Supreme Court by the security officials. Informed
sources told Dawn that when late in the afternoon Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry was returning
from the President’s camp office he tried to go to the apex court, but a strong police posse
chased his car which was blocked near Serena hotel. In the meantime senior
superintendent of police Tariq Yasin rushed to the spot, and escorted the chief justice to
his official residence. The security outside his residence had already been increased, and
it was not possible to even contact him on telephone.
On his first appearance before the SJC on Tuesday, Justice Chaudhry had submitted a
four-page statement, calling for the reconstitution of the SJC with the exclusion of three
members.
In his statement submitted to the SJC, the ‘non-functional’ chief justice objected that the
acting chief justice had been appointed contrary to Article 180 of the Constitution which
provided that the acting chief justice could be appointed only when the office of the chief
justice fell vacant.
Moreover, under Article 209 of the Constitution, reference against the chief justice could
be heard only by the senior-most judge who, in the ongoing situation, is Justice Rana
Bhagwandas, he said, adding that there was no urgency to convene the SJC meeting in the
absence of Justice Bhagwandas, who is abroad till March 22.
He said that a reference was pending against Justice Abdul Hameed Dogar before the SJC
in a case concerning the Shah Latif Bhatai University, Khairpur.
He said the LHC chief justice could also not sit on the council because more than one
reference of misconduct was pending against him before the same council. He said the
LHC chief justice had also developed strong hostilities against him as he had not
accepted his recommendations of advocates and judicial officers for elevation as judge of
the high court. Moreover, his elevation as the judge of the apex court was also opposed by
him in August 2005 for some reasons which could not be divulged now, he added.
Former SCBA president Malik Mohammed Qayyum told reporters that there was no
provision in the Constitution or any law to suspend the chief justice. He said the
suspension was a virtual removal from the office and therefore contrary to Article 209 of
the Constitution.
"How can the president suspend the chief justice before the findings of the SJC?” he said.
(Dawn)
‘An unprecedented occurrence’
By Reema Abbasi and Iftikhar A. Khan
Former chief justice Sajjad Ali Shah, who was unceremoniously removed during the
Nawaz Sharif government, termed it ‘an unprecedented occurrence’. “This has created
immense insecurity amongst other judges and is another step towards the ruination of an
institution. A chief justice has never been sent to the Supreme Judicial Council, but other
judges have been tried and action has been taken against them,” he said.
Justice Sajjad Ali Shah observed that the Chief Justice cannot be removed, suspended or
made ‘non-functional’ under Article 209 of the Constitution in its present form.He said
under the relevant Article, the Chief Justice has to head the Supreme Judicial Council
with two next senior most judges of the apex court and two senior most Chief Justices of
the High Courts as its members. He said under Article 209 (3), if the inquiry is against a
judge of the Supreme Court, the judge of the court next to him in seniority, and if such
member is the Chief Justice of a High Court, the Chief Justice of another High Court next
in seniority amongst the Chief Justices of the remaining High Courts shall act as a
member of the Council in his place.
He said the Constitution was silent on what to do in case the complaint was against Chief
Justice of the Supreme Court.
He said there was an ambiguity in the law and it was open to interpretation. He said it was
the job of the lawmakers to spot a mistake and rectify it.
He said the judge against whom a complaint is being considered by the Supreme Judicial
Council, stops discharging his duties till the disposal of the case. He, however, said the
orders for suspension or making a judge non-functional cannot be issued by the president.
"This is against the principle of trichotomy of powers. He said all the organs of the state
must function within their own scope and there should be no overlapping, interference or
domination.
Justice (retd) Sajjad Ali Shah accused the government of weakening the judiciary and
stressed that the judiciary must assert itself at this point of time. "The constitution and the
constitutional institutions cannot function in the absence of the judiciary," he remarked.
He was of the view that the action against the chief justice had a nexus with the upcoming
polls. He said the president wanted to be elected again by the existing assemblies, and
there were speculations that elections might be postponed for one year. He said important
cases were being heard by the larger bench headed by the chief justice, which also
included the one pertaining to enforced disappearances.
He said the government wanted to create an impression that democracy had failed to
deliver and only the army can save Pakistan from total disaster. “My fear is that chaos
will grip the country and the government will come up with a new constitution.”
In reply to a question, he said the bold decisions in the Steel Mills and the kite-flying
cases may have prompted the action against the chief justice.
Sajjad Ali Shah said the action against Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry was
different from his (Sajjad’s) removal as chief justice. He said in his case the judges and
the government had joined hands in a conspiracy to unconstitutionally remove him from
office.
In reply to another question, he said even after suspending Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry,
Justice Baghwan Das, who was the senior most judge of the court after him, should have
been appointed the acting chief justice. He said `India is not far away. It takes just 25
minutes to reach Lahore from New Delhi," he remarked.
Former chief justice Saiduzzaman Siddiqui, who ceased to hold office after his refusal to
take a fresh oath in Jan 2001, said that under Article 209 of the Constitution, the president
does not have the powers to remove any superior court judge except on the
recommendations of the Supreme Judicial Council.
He said only the president was empowered to make a reference against a chief justice or
judge of superior courts if he is incapable of properly performing the duties of his office
or was guilty of misconduct. But before taking any action, he must wait for the outcome
of the inquiry to be conducted by the SJC. If the SJC rejects the reference, the judge
would continue to hold office.
Justice Wajihuddin Ahmed, who also stood retired in 2001 following his refusal to take
oath, said the government action was illegal, unconstitutional and unethical. It would
lower the country’s prestige. He said there was no vacancy in the office of chief justice
and no acting chief justice could have been appointed.
Nasir Aslam Zahid, a former chief justice of Sindh who was relegated to the Federal
Shariat court during Benazir Bhutto’s second tenure, supported Sajjad Ali Shah’s
condemnation. “This is a highly retrogressive step and is more serious than the PCO. It
opens up actions against any judge. If someone does not agree with the president, he can
just be accused of misconduct or something and removed," he says.
Mr Zahid said that the power of removal can only be exercised after the preparation of a
report. "My understanding of Article 209 is that action can only be taken after the
necessary proceedings have been completed and the report has been submitted by the SJC
to the President."
However, former chief justice Saeed-uz-Zaman Siddiqui played it fairly safe with milder
comments. "It is not good for the judiciary and its reputation has been greatly affected.
But the president has the right to take such an action and whether it is right or wrong, can
only be determined when the report is presented by the SJC."
Mr Zaman also said that the SJC comprises the chief justice, two senior-most judges from
the Supreme Court and two senior-most judges from the high courts.
Abid Hassan Minto, a prominent senior lawyer, feels that Iftikhar Chaudhry's suspension
may have come about because some of his decisions were viewed as acts of dissension.
"He was involved in some judicial activism and it is said that the government was allergic
to him and his actions were being perceived as anti-government. This move has created
several questions and is controversial," says Minto.
I.A Rehman, a leading human rights activist, also criticised President Musharraf’s
decision. "In a country where such a thing happens, it is a symptom of something very
rotten in the state structure. The state is faced with such utter collapse of everything
valuable and the cancer eating into the vitals of a democratic state has reached a very
dangerous stage," says an irate Rehman.
"Sajjad Ali Shah was undone by his own colleagues. The state has been corrupting the
judiciary for a very long time," he continues.
"Such a dismissal can only be acted upon after the Supreme Judicial Council decides on
merit against an accused judge. The speed with which the Chief Justice of Pakistan has
been removed shows that the executive is nervous of an already tame judiciary."
An official statement issued by HRCP doubts that Iftikhar Chaudhry’s removal was
prompted by any misuse of authority "as such judicial practices are fully tolerated, if not
encouraged by the Executive. The process adopted is also illegal and irregular. A
reference by itself cannot grant the Executive the powers to dismiss a judge of the
superior courts.
“It is significant that the Chief Justice of the Sindh High Court was flown to the capital in
haste and in a chartered plane to secure a prompt decision from the Supreme Judicial
Council." ( Dawn)
The Pakistan Bar Council described the action as a case of ‘illegal house arrest’. “Yes, he
is in illegal detention,” Ali Ahmed Kurd, vice-chairman of the PBC, told reporters outside
the official residence of the chief justice.
“There is no other way to describe the situation as no one is being allowed to meet him,”
he said after police officials stopped him and other lawyers from going inside the chief
justice’s residence.
The views expressed by Munir A. Malik, the President of the Supreme Court Bar
Association, were equally strong as he described it an attempt to pressure the chief justice
into resigning. ( Dawn)
WITH the Chief Justice of Pakistan having become “non-functional”, another sordid
chapter has been added to the judiciary’s chequered history. Ghulam Mohammad began
the process of destroying the foundations of Pakistan’s constitutional and democratic
structure, but he is not known to have interfered with the judiciary.
Now coming to Friday’s episode, one is appalled to see the photograph of a general in
uniform calling the country’s Chief Justice to his “camp office” as if the latter were a
‘suspect’ in a case of embezzlement, thus stripping him of the dignity to which he was
entitled to by virtue of the office he held. Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry
was then not allowed to return to his office and was “escorted” home. Gen Musharraf has
made a reference against him to the Supreme Judicial Council, and the media has
published a list of the alleged acts of malfeasance by Mr Justice Chaudhry. Since the
charges are sub judice and commenting on them would constitute ‘contempt’, one cannot
but take note of the background against which the Chief Justice was made “non-
functional” and the “judicial activism” that came to be associated with his name since he
became chief justice in June 2005. More important, it is difficult to avoid the suspicion
that some of his verdicts had irked the government and for that reason it did not wish an
independent Chief Justice to be in office at a time when the apex court could be called
upon to decide vital constitutional issues in the light of continued reports that President
Musharraf will retain the two offices and that the existing assemblies will re-elect him as
president for another term. In some other cases, too, he had been bold — like reversing
the sale of Pakistan Steel, stopping the decision of the Capital Development Authority to
turn a public park into a mini-golf course, and taking suo motu actions to make some
highly progressive and popular decisions concerning human rights, women and
environment. However, the decision that must have hurt the government relates to
“disappearances”, of which there have been quite a few in the context of the war on
terror.
( Dawn)
DEMOLOSHING CONSTITUTIONAL
INSTITUTIONS
Bureaucracy is disillusioned: Nepotism, power-based influences abound:
Kiani
He regretted that all the good work done by the Central Selection Board
(CSB) in reviving the confidence of the bureaucracy had been lost.
Speaking at his last press conference in his office, he quoted top bureaucrats
as having told him that they were being treated as “dogs” by the government.
Gen Kiani retires from his FPSC post prematurely on Thursday (March 30)
after the government reduced his tenure by two-and-a-half years through a
presidential ordinance last year.
Gen Kiani, one of the key characters in the 1999 military takeover, had
challenged the ordinance in Lahore High Court. However, the court rejected
his petition.
The general, whose relations with the government became strained after he
opposed certain promotions and extensions in contract including those of
retired army officers, said he did not like to humiliate the government, but
his conscience didn’t allow him to look the other way either.
On the issue of vacancies of FPSC members that were not filled by the
government, Gen Kiani said the situation had aggravated and today there is a
backlog of 2,000 candidates for general recruitment.
“Vacancies are not being filled and ministries are crying hoarse, but FPSC
feels helpless because of shortage of members,” he said and added that this
time even the CSS interviews were conducted by smaller than usual panels.
He also spoke of the reforms he undertook during his tenure specifically the
reduction in overall time period of CSS cycle and general recruitment.
The general who also chaired the Central Selection Board said he
streamlined the working of the CSB.
(March 30, 2006: Dawn)
Amir Mateen, an investigative journalist with The News, was the target of
intimidation in early September after writing several reports on the
government’s suspected intention of rigging the general elections on 10
October, a fear voiced by opposition parties. Mateen’s phones were tapped
and he was followed by ISI agents. His colleagues and relatives were also
harassed.
ASSAULT ON MEDIA
Editor-in-Chief: Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman
ISLAMABAD: The press was under siege on a Friday that turned into a black day due to the use of brute force by
the police.
The office of The News, Islamabad and Geo’s capital headquarters located on the same premises were vandalised
by the Punjab police without provocation, as Islamabad’s deputy commissioner and the senior superintendent
police kept standing at the corner of the building.
While we were preparing to evacuate to save ourselves from the thrashing by the police, which had entered the
premises, the thick smoke of teargas enveloping the surroundings prevented us even moving an inch.
Our Karachi office was insisting that we should leave the building immediately but that was simply impossible
because of zero visibility. Initially, it was the Jang building’s main glass entrance that was smashed into pieces by
the police.
We never thought that the police would dare enter our office as well. But what happened later was that The
News office was twice attacked by the police as if it was the main target. The first assault was launched by a
contingent of three or four cops, when we were watching Geo coverage after being literally confined to our office.
Suddenly, an office boy of the Jang group entered the room, followed by a few gun-wielding Punjab policemen.
Two cops gatecrashed while others followed. We jumped from our seats to block this unlawful entry of the
policemen and tried to push them back. When one cop tried to proceed further, he was stopped by us, while the
other policemen were prevented from entering the office. “We are doing this on the orders of the SP,” the cop
said. We finally shoved the policeman out of our office. In the scuffle, his cap fell in our room.
Several staffers, including Ansar Abbasi, the Editor Investigations, were present in the office. However, none of
the cops touched anyone there. Within a few minutes, a comparatively larger contingent returned with
vengeance. They started smashing the windows — as shown in the Geo footage — repeatedly. We were just
helplessly watching the scenario.
With the windows completely smashed, we were preparing ourselves for a thrashing but to our good luck, this
time none of the cops entered. From outside the room, one of the policemen asked us to give his cap back, which
we did. As he got it, he and his other colleagues smashed the remaining windows of The News offices, while
hurling abuse at us. But we did not react.
Ironically, the policemen had destroyed The News offices, when Information Minister Muhammad Ali Durrani
entered our corridor after visiting the adjacent Geo headquarters. He saw the attack with his own eyes but was
helpless to do anything.
Before that the glass of the back and main entrance gates of the Geo offices was smashed. The police
manhandled the staff and beat the security guards. Geo staffers tried to prevent the trespassing by the Punjab
police but failed.
Sensing the attack, Geo Bureau chief Hamid Mir went live on air and said the police were about to attack the
offices. Geo reporter and producer Asma Chaudhry came under severe assault while Durrani was entering the
Geo offices.
At the same time, she was on air, while standing near the outer gate of the Jang building. The police threw
stones at her, and she faced teargas shells while discharging her professional duty on the rooftop of the building.
When she complained that she was being attacked, Durrani said he could not do anything except to apologise.
Geo reporter Hassan Nasir was arrested but later released. Geo cameramen Khaliq and Alexander were injured by
rubber bullets fired by the police. Without any provocation, the police broke the glass of the back door, while
hurling abuse at the TV network. Hamid Mir tried to stop policemen, who wanted to enter the building through
the front gate. Police also tried to take him away in a jeep, but security guards saved him.
When Durrani visited our office a few minutes after the assault, he condemned the attack in the harshest terms.
Deputy Inspector General of Police Shahid Nadim Baloch came to our office, but could not bear the heat of our
arguments. He left the office saying there was no point in being here.
Following him was Minister of State for Information Tariq Azim, who was briefed about the attack. He condemned
it and expressed solidarity with us. Following the timely photo sessions of Durrani and Tariq Azim, The News and
Geo offices saw a beeline of concerned sympathisers including politicians, lawyers and members of civil society.
They offered their full support during this testing time and assured the media that they were only a call away if
they were ever needed.
WHAT A PLUNDER?