President upholds removal of NAB officer for leaking information
Islamabad : President Dr Arif Alvi on Friday upheld the punishment of ‘Removal from Service’ of a former Assistant Director of the National Accountability Bureau (NAB), Sukkur, Faheemullah, over the leaking of classified information that led to the escape of an accused person from arrest.
The President rejected the appeal of Faheemullah against the major penalty of ‘Removal from Service’ imposed by the NAB and stated that for corrupt individuals, such penalty of did not do justice.
He directed NAB to prosecute the corrupt official and others identified in the inquiry in a Court of Law to punish them for the wrong done to the country and for doing corruption within the very institution that was responsible for controlling corruption.
According to details, Faheemullah (the appellant) was accused of unauthorised leaking out the Warrant of Arrest (WoA) of an accused, Rafiq Ahmed Rajpar, ex-deputy director of Food Department, Larkana, who was wanted in a Food case by the NAB, Sukkur.
Faheemullah shared the classified information with his friend, Yaqoob Rajpar (Ex-Deputy Assistant Director NAB, who is currently serving as the Assistant Commissioner, Federal Board of Revenue, Shikarpur).
Yaqoob passed on the information about WoA to Rafiq Ahmed Rajpar, who managed to flee and avoided the execution of the Warrant of Arrest.
After inquiry and adhering to all legal formalities, the charges of illegal sharing of WoA were proven against Faheemullah and a major penalty of ‘Removal from Service’ was imposed upon the appellant.
Faheemullah, then, submitted an appeal addressed to the President of Pakistan, the Appellate Authority under NAB Employees Terms and Conditions of Services (TCS) Rules 2002. After granting the NAB official the opportunity of being heard and examining the details of the case, President Dr Arif Alvi rejected his appeal on the grounds that he had not provided any cogent reason to recall the earlier decision of ‘Removal from Service’.
He noted that WoA and other documents regarding the case, which originated from Faheemullah, reached Rafiq Rajpar, who on the basis of information was getting bails and avoiding arrest in a Food case.
He also pointed out that the existence of links between Faheemullah, Yaqoob Rajpar and Rafiq Rajpar was established, and the forensic analysis of telephones owned by the appellant and Yaqoob Rajpar also showed that gross corruption was taking place in NAB under them.
The president directed that investigation and tracking should be done in all other details about this naked corruption within NAB, Sukkur, and rejected the appeal of Faheemullah.
-
Jessica Alba, Cash Warren Finalize Divorce After 16 Years Of Marriage -
China’s AI Boom Takes Center Stage At Spring Festival One Year After DeepSeek Stirred The Industry -
James Van Der Beek Called His Sixth Child Jeremiah 'healing For Us' Before His Death -
Elon Musk Vs Reid Hoffman: Epstein Files Fuel Public Spat Between Tech Billionaires -
Gordon Ramsay Denies Victoria Beckham Got Handsy With Brooklyn At His Wedding -
Gordon Ramsay Makes Unexpected Plea To Brooklyn As He Addresses Beckham Family Feud -
Prince Harry Warns Meghan Markle To 'step Back' -
Selena Gomez Explains Why She Thought Lupus Was 'life-or-death' -
New Zealand Flood Crisis: State Of Emergency Declared As North Island Braces For More Storms -
Nancy Guthrie Case: Mystery Deepens As Unknown DNA Found At Property -
James Van Der Beek's Brother Breaks Silence On Actor's Tragic Death -
Megan Thee Stallion On New Romance With Klay Thompson: 'I'm Comfy' -
Nicole Kidman Celebrates Galentine’s Day Months After Keith Urban Split -
Justin Bieber Unveils Hailey Bieber As First Face Of SKYLRK In Intimate Campaign Debut -
Caitlin O’Connor Says Fiance Joe Manganiello Has Changed Valentine’s Day For Her -
Rachel Zoe Sends Out Message For Womne With Her Post-divorce Diamond Ring