In “Raushan Khyal
Islamic” Pakistan,
Money-laundering or Corruption is forgiveable!
THE New York Times, August 6, 2003: ‘Bhutto
Sentenced in Switzerland
— A Swiss magistrate has found former Prime Minister Benazir
Bhutto and her husband guilty of money laundering.
They were given six-month suspended jail terms, fined $50,000 each and were
ordered to pay US$11m to the Pakistani government. The six-year-long case
alleged that Ms Bhutto, who lives in exile in London
and Dubai, and her husband, Asif
Zardari, deposited in Swiss accounts $0m given them
by a Swiss company in exchange for a contract in Pakistan. The couple said they
would appeal.’
Swissinfo (swissinfo.org/eng), Oct 9, 2007: ‘Amnesty
spells trouble for Swiss Bhutto case — ... Daniel Zappelli,
the general prosecutor of Geneva,
is facing a quandary. Should the politician and her husband stand trial now
that Bhutto has been granted an amnesty by her own country?...The couple was
first convicted of simple money laundering in 2003 by a Geneva investigating
judge who handed down a six-month suspended sentence.
The Bhuttos appealed against the magistrate’s
decision but were later accused of more serious money laundering offences…
Dominique Henchoz, the lawyer representing the
Pakistani government in Geneva,
said it was still not clear whether legal action would be stopped. “We’ll have
to wait to examine the exact wording used in the decree,” he added. “Because
surely to speak of an amnesty implies that there has been an act of
corruption.”...The case opened in 1998...The three investigating judges in
Geneva who have dealt with the file for a decade found that Bhutto and her
husband received $2m (SFr14.25m) in Swiss bank accounts belonging to companies
registered in the Virgin Islands and Panama…Vincent Fournier, one of the three
judges, has confirmed his office is about to pass on the case to the
prosecutor. “It is surprising to note that for 10 years Pakistan has
constantly pushed us to see that justice be done. And now, in the light of a
change of political allegiance, Madame Bhutto benefits from an amnesty.”’
Crystal clear, is it not? The couple stand convicted of corruption.
Benazir Bhutto was convicted for simple money
laundering in 2003. She appealed against that sentence and under a quirk of
Swiss law the matter was automatically reopened. She is now being prosecuted
for aggravated money laundering, which is a far more serious offence and
carries a longer jail sentence. The matter has dragged on for years, partly due
to her delaying tactics, but mostly due to the National Accountability Bureau’s
incompetence and failure to raise the matter forcefully for reasons best known
to it — or perhaps under orders from the ‘high-ups’.
It must be remembered that she has been prosecuted for money laundering which
is a criminal offence under the laws of Switzerland,
but which, at the relevant time, was not a crime in Pakistan. In Pakistan she was in fact prosecuted for
corruption, while in Switzerland
she was prosecuted for money laundering which offence, it is important to note,
took place exclusively in Switzerland.
Since the prosecuting authorities are Swiss it is legally completely possible
that her prosecution can continue in Switzerland. However, viewing the
matter in terms of practical politics, i.e. expediency, chances are that the
government of Pakistan
will try to prevail upon the Swiss authorities to drop the proceedings.
The Swiss authorities may either reject this manoeuvre
on the part of the government as being patently a politically motivated ploy or
alternatively decide that since the GoP, which has
been illegally deprived of millions of dollars, has no desire to reclaim this
money for the benefit of the poor deprived people of Pakistan there is no
particular reason why they should proceed with the prosecution.
Let us look at it this way — if someone has been mugged in the street and
deprived of his money and decides to bestow it upon the robber as largesse,
rewarding the mugger, that is his option. The only
difference in this case is that the money did not belong to President General
Pervez Musharraf, nor did he consult the people of Pakistan before deciding to bestow
it upon Benazir.
If reports be true, the money laundering does not stop in Switzerland nor
did it cease post Oct 12, 1999. According to reports in our press and a story
posted on the website of Pakistan Times (www.pakistantimes.com), NAB has
disclosed last week that it has made an International Mutual Legal Assistance
request to the Spanish government for information on a trail of money leading
to Spain through Swiss banks starting in the year 2000-1 when, reportedly, Benazir, henchman Rehman Malik
(former additional director of the FIA during her prime ministership,
a fugitive from Pakistan where he is wanted for corruption but covered by this
monstrosity of an amnesty) and relative Hassan Ali Jafferi
registered two companies, Petroline and Tempo Global
Gains, both Free Zone (offshore) companies, in Sharjah.
In 2001, Petroline opened two bank accounts in a
Spanish bank, and Tempo did the same in 2002. Copious amounts of money were
transferred into these accounts from Switzerland and the UAE.
Reportedly, the High Court of Valencia has appointed an examining magistrate to
investigate the affairs of the shareholders in the two companies — Bhutto, Rehman and Jafferi — and the
competent Spanish authorities have frozen the two companies, their bank
accounts and a villa in Marbella and entrusted prosecution to the office of the
public prosecutor of Valencia.
If there be truth in all this, one must wonder what the Swiss judicial
authorities think of it all in light of the criminal amnesty, a matter now in
our Supreme Court and sub judice.
The rantings and ravings of the few PPP diehards who
insist that the amnesty is the best thing to have happened to Pakistan since
its creation are centred on the excuse that many, or
all, of the corruption cases filed in our courts against Benazir
and her husband were not only ‘politically motivated’ but that due to their
snow-white innocence nothing could be proven against them. Again, one must ask
why there was never a guilty or innocent verdict handed down? Fine, even if we
admit that the cases filed in Pakistan
could be tainted politically, such is not the case in Switzerland, or indeed in Spain. One can
hardly accuse the Swiss and Spanish governments of political victimisation.
Extracted from With disgust, Ardeshir Cowasjee, Dawn, Karachi, October 17, 2007)