The Supreme Court on Friday asked the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) to provide the court with tax details of Aleema Khanum, Prime Minister Imran Khan’s sister.
The court has taken up a case against 44 politically exposed individuals or their benamidars who possessed properties in the United Arab Emirates.
Khanum is identified as benamidar of a property. A notice was issued to her through email as well as delivered at her home address, but her domestic staff said she was abroad.
According to an FBR official who appeared in court today, Khanum had benefited from a tax amnesty scheme and thus her tax information is confidential.
“You can provide the information to the court in a sealed envelope and we will take a look at it,” Chief Justice of Pakistan Mian Saqib Nisar responded.
The chief justice also said that the court had pinpointed 20 people to be investigated. The FBR official told the court that the board is conducting an investigation into these 20 people.
“Six of these people have been cleared on the basis of the sworn statement to the FBR and the Federal investigation Agency (FIA),” the official said while adding that the statement the other 14 gave to the FIA do not match the FBR’s records.
Dissatisfied by the speed of the process the judges said that if the FBR continues at the current pace, the completion of this investigation will take a long time.
“How long will you take to complete the investigation,” the chief justice asked.
“Sir the process will be completed by the end of December,” the FBR official responded.
The CJP, however, directed that Khanum’s tax record be brought to court today, adjourning the hearing till later in the day.
This list of politically exposed people was part of an annexure submitted to a three-judge SC bench comprising Justices Nisar, Faisal Arab and Justice Ijazul Ahsan.
Taking suo motu notice of the matter, the apex court had observed that it appeared the money siphoned off abroad without payment of taxes through illegal channels represented either ill-gotten gains or kickbacks from public contracts.
“Such money creates gross disproportion, inequality and disparity in society, which warps economic activity and growth, and constitutes plunder and theft of national wealth,” it said.
In an earlier order, the court had also observed that it was common knowledge for years that a large number of Pakistani citizens were maintaining their bank accounts in other countries without disclosing these to the authorities competent under the laws of Pakistan or paying taxes on the same in accordance with the law.