but not who hid that. There were thousands of people in the country, he said, with assets abroad and they did declare that, adding that Ishaq Dar openly stated that he had $200 million in foreign countries.
According to Zaidi, Mian Mansha has mentioned a London property in his declaration. He is now being asked about the money transferred and its source. The FBR can verify the property. Showing the property is a great gesture as very few in Pakistan have shared the details of their assets abroad.
There is lot of confusion about transferring money from Pakistan which should be cleared. The law allows every Pakistani to maintain a foreign currency account and he can also own assets in other countries. It means that every Pakistani can maintain a foreign currency account and go into business dealing through it and buy properties abroad. It is an excellent system to accumulate wealth and there is no other alternative in the system.
To prove his point, Zaidi cited the State Bank laws and Foreign Exchange Act, allowing the Pakistani citizens to own assets abroad, but which should be declared.
When asked whether the State Bank’s permission is required to buy a property worth millions of dollars, Zaidi said there was no need of that. Explaining his argument, he said there were two types of investment in Pakistan.
According to Zaidi, in the first type, one asks the State Bank to allow conversion of rupees into dollars and seeks the permission to invest abroad. Secondly, you can maintain a foreign currency account in Pakistan and also feed it. An account holder can instruct his bank that he is buying this property and, therefore, remit the required money, while giving a receipt to the bank. But the condition is that the said asset is mentioned in the wealth statement.
At this point, Sethi said one could buy a property in another country after a legal transfer of funds, but the source of money had to be declared there for the buying purposes.
According to Sethi, one can show, in this way, the source of money Pakistan and its trail through the bank transactions. Hence, it is white money and doesn’t involve money laundering. Once the property is purchased, it starts generating income on which tax is paid in that country being a registered taxpayer. And once tax is paid there, he is not to pay the same back home, as law says income tax is not paid twice. Sethi said whether the tax is paid at one place and there is no double taxation - a point seconded by Zaidi.
While explaining his point, Sethi said it meant that levelling allegations against Mian Mansha was unfair, adding that no one could match Mian Mansha and his family in paying taxes.
While agreeing with Sethi’s point of view, Zaidi said the Western countries did not accept the funds that were not transferred through a reliable account. They accepted the transactions only through Pakistan’s foreign currency accounts, he added. Sethi said the people involved in levelling baseless allegations against Mian Mansha could be sued, to which Zaidi agreed and stated that declaring assets in the wealth statement was the best option.
Sethi said harassing the people like Mian Mansha was a clear injustice, as he was a big businessman and ran an efficient bank. How a businessman could invest in a country where he was not respected, he remarked.