SHC restrains NAB from intimidating ambassador-designate to US
KARACHI: The Sindh High Court has restrained the National Accountability Bureau from taking any adverse action, including arrest, against Pakistan’s ambassador designate to the US Ali Jahangir Siddiqui with regard to its corruption inquiry.
The direction came on a petition filed by Ali Siddiqui against the NAB's call-up notice issued to him with regard to a corruption inquiry against directors of investment firm Azgard Nine, Agritech. The court, however, directed Ali Jahangir Siddiqui to appear before the NAB inquiry being conducted by the NAB Lahore in term of call-up notice.
The petitioner’s counsel, Khalid Javed, submitted that NAB issued the call-up notice on March 15 to reply to the allegations being leveled against directors of investment firm M/s Azgard Nine for siphoning off Euros 23.578 million in 2008 for purchase of Italian company Monte Bello SRL using a foreign company Fairytal SRL, Sweden, which resulted in loss to the company shareholders besides, sale of shares of Agritech to different financial, government institutions by the Azgard
Nine at a higher price than the market price to settle the loan defaults of the company, which resulted in approximate loss of Rs40 billion to different financial/government institutions.
He submitted that the petitioner, who was also a special assistant to the prime minister, has nothing to do with the offence and propaganda was launched by the rival business competitors soon he was designated by the government for the post of Pakistan’s ambassador to the US. He submitted that an inquiry initiated by the NAB was barred under Section 41-B of the Security Exchange Commission of Pakistan Act besides the purchase in question was made with the approval of the State Bank of Pakistan. He submitted that transaction of Agritech shares was made in November 2012 whereas he resigned from the board of directors of the company in March 2010. He submitted that the petitioner did not commit any illegality and the transaction was protected under the SECP Act and NAB had no jurisdiction to issue such call-up notices.
The SHC’s division bench, headed by Justice Mohammad Iqbal Kalhoro, issued notices to additional attorney general, deputy prosecutor general NAB and others and called their comments on April 4. The court in the meantime restrained the NAB from taking any adverse action against the petitioner, including arrest in respect of the call-up notice till the next date of hearing whereas the petitioner shall appear before the NAB inquiry at Lahore in terms of call-up notice.
-
Rachel McAdams Becomes Object Of Jokes At Hollywood Star Of Fame Event -
South Korea's Ex-PM Han Duck-soo Jailed For 23 Years Over Martial Law Crises -
Global Markets On Edge Over Greenland Dispute: Is US Economic Leadership At Risk? -
King, Queen Visit Deadly Train Crash Site -
Oxford Research Warns ChatGPT Reflects Western Worldviews -
UK Inflation Unexpectedly Rises To 3.4% In December, The First Increase In Five Months -
Meghan Markle Set To Take Big Decision On Returning To UK For Invictus Games -
Prince Harry To Leave Britain One Day Earlier Than Expected For THIS Reason -
The Way You Consume Sugar Could Be Affecting Your Health -
Brooklyn Beckham Gets Backing From Vanessa Marcil Amid Feud With Parents -
OpenAI Uses AI To Detect Under 18 Users On ChatGPT -
Philippines To Lift Ban On Grok AI After Musk's Platform Commits To Fix Safety Concerns -
Trump Vows ‘no Going Back’ On Greenland Ahead Of Davos Visit -
Alexander Skarsgard Breaks Silence On Rumors He Is Bisexual -
King Charles Faces Rift With Prince William Over Prince Harry’s Invictus Games -
Elon Musk’s Critique On ChatGPT Safety Draws Sharp Response From Sam Altman