EgyptAir flight lands in Uzbekistan after bomb threat

CAIRO: A bomb threat forced an EgyptAir aircraft en route to Beijing from Cairo to make an emergency landing in Uzbekistan on Wednesday, Egyptian officials said.
All 118 passengers and 17 crew members on board the Airbus A-330-220 plane were safely evacuated, Uzbek state carrier Uzbekistan Airways said in a statement.
There was no statement from EgyptAir or official confirmation that the threat was a hoax.
The plane landed in Urgench, in western Uzbekistan, after EgyptAir received a call saying there was a bomb on board, two Egyptian aviation sources said. The plane was then searched, but no explosives were found, they said.
“The plane is preparing to resume its journey. It was a hoax, thank God,” said one of the officials.
An EgyptAir Airbus-320 jet, en route from Paris to Cairo, crashed in the Mediterranean last month, killing all 66 people on board. An investigation to determine why and exactly where it crashed continues.
EgyptAir has received a number of bomb threats since then, all of which have turned out to be hoaxes

India's membership of Nuclear Suppliers Group 'not merited', says NYT

India's membership of Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) is "not merited until the country meets the group's standards", a New York Times (NYT) editorial said on Saturday.
The NSG is a 48-nation club dedicated to curbing nuclear arms proliferation by controlling the export and re-transfer of materials that could foster nuclear weapons development.
The group's membership has signed the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty but India has refused to do so, which means "it has not accepted legally binding commitments to pursue disarmament negotiations, halt the production of fissile material for nuclear weapons and not test nuclear weapons".
US President Barack Obama could take advantage of the US-India ties and push for India's adherence to nuclear proliferation standards.
However, the US has for years "sought to bend the rules for India's nuclear programme" to maintain a cooperative relationship to counter growing Chinese influence in the region, and Obama has been lobbying for India to gain NSG membership, the editorial said.
As part of a 2008 deal signed with the US during the Bush era, India promised it would be "ready to assume the same responsibilities and practices" as other member states, but has fallen short by continuing to produce fissile material and expand its nuclear arsenal, the NYT said.
If India is successful in gaining entry to the group, it could keep Pakistan from gaining membership because group decisions are made through consensus.
"That could give Pakistan, which at one time provided nuclear technology to North Korea and Iran, new incentives to misbehave," the NYT said.
However, the NYT said, China's opposition to India could doom the South Asian power's bid for membership "for now".
The editorial goes on to say that India should be required to meet the NSG's standards, "including opening negotiations with Pakistan and China on curbing nuclear weapons and halting the production of nuclear fuel for bombs".

PM discharged from hospital, returns to London home

KARACHI: Exactly a week after undergoing successful open-heart surgery at a London hospital, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif moved to his Mayfair apartment on Monday.
He apparently walked unassisted from the hospital building to a car parked outside the facility.
The prime minister’s daughter, Maryam Nawaz, again used the social media platform to update her two million followers, as well as the nation, about her father’s movement from hospital to home while thanking the Almighty and the nation.
“The crescent bringing glad tidings sighted,” she said in on one of her tweets while announcing the prime minister’s return home on the eve of Ramazan in Pakistan: “PM going back home. Which of the blessings of thy Lord shall ye deny? Ramadan Kareem to all.”

Offshore tax havens

FOR most Pakistanis, the Panama leaks have been their first introduction to the secretive world of offshore financial centres, or OFCs. However, these OFCs, including Panama, have been in the news over the past few years as global concern has gradually mounted over their existence and modus operandi — and what they truly represent.
These OFCs — ranging from Cayman Islands, the Bahamas, British Virgin Islands, to Jersey among a host of other exotic locations — are low-tax jurisdictions that specialise in financial and banking secrecy, which is provided by legal cover as well as by the creation of offshore companies domiciled in these territories. (Not all the centres are located in small, faraway paradise islands. According to estimates by credible institutions, the US state of Delaware is the third-largest tax shelter in the world.)
The purpose of the offshore companies registered in these jurisdictions is mainly two-fold: for global multinationals and other companies, the benefit is the ability to route their profits through these OFCs to avoid higher tax rates in their native or domestic place of incorporation/registration; for individuals, the primary purpose is to hide their wealth and assets, whether legally acquired or via illegal means.

Democracy and development are being undermined by global tax shelters.


These offshore companies are used by the global elite to hide the beneficial ownership of anything and everything ranging from bank accounts, properties, other companies, yachts, expensive paintings, executive jets etc held around the world from tax and political authorities in non-protected jurisdictions.
The issue of offshore tax shelters came to a head in the aftermath of the global financial crisis, and the painful austerity measures governments were forced to adopt as a result. The policy response in most countries hit hard by the recession resulted in widespread job losses, and cuts to pensions and other social welfare schemes. For ordinary citizens of these countries, it has been a painful and unending period of adjustment. However, for large banks and corporations, especially in the US, the reality has been quite different: taxpayer funds have been used to provide bailouts, and in egregious cases, to underwrite compensation bonuses for the top executives of firms whose bad investments, if not outright malfeasance, caused the crisis in the first place.
In twisted irony, many of these same financial institutions and corporations have been legally ‘dodging’ their taxes by using the jurisdictions and tax structures facilitated by the offshore financial centres. Hence the outrage in advanced economies.
For citizens of the developing world, these offshore tax havens represent a different reality. Much of the money deposited in these offshore accounts and shell companies has allegedly been siphoned off by corrupt rulers, crooked bureaucrats and fraudulent businessmen from shady contracts and projects (think the likes of yellow cabs, SGS-Cotecna pre-shipment inspection, Daewoo, oil-for-food, Chinese trains, guns for police, Safe City projects, ephedrine, Haj, metro buses and Orange Line trains).
The projects and contracts are not only overpriced and paid for by incurring expensive debt (or using developmental aid, a scarce resource in itself), but usually are either not required or short-change the country’s citizens by delivering ‘damaged goods’ (think expired polio vaccines or faulty scanners for the multi-billion Safe City project). In addition, because the public contracts have been awarded on the basis of other than merit, it undermines the business and competitiveness environment in the country, potentially reducing the investment made.
The other element in the saga of siphoning money to offshore accounts is tax avoidance and evasion. While corporates use OFCs for largely legal tax avoidance, the use by individuals of these tax vehicles more often than not represents tax evasion in many jurisdictions. According to a 2012 estimate by the Tax Justice Network, the global super-rich had stashed approximately $21 trillion of wealth in offshore tax havens. The unpaid taxes on this horde of wealth were estimated by them to amount to around $280 billion. This is equivalent to the combined economic size of 61 of the smallest countries of the world.
In the context of Pakistan, it is important to realise that only a small fraction of the 11.5 million Mossack Fonseca files have been released. Hence, the limited number of individuals exposed so far is very likely to increase dramatically in the months ahead. Nonetheless, based on what has been revealed, the specific questions the Panama leaks have raised involve the following: mis-declaration of assets and concealment of income to tax authorities; potential money-laundering; and mis-declaration in election filings by public office holders.
(For a fuller perspective, it is important to keep in mind that when the offshore companies in question — the ownership of which has not been denied but rather confirmed in public by the prime minister’s family — were formed in the early 1990s, State Bank forex rules stipulated that it was illegal for a Pakistani resident to open and operate an offshore account.) Much like the case of Rockwood estate — or ‘Surrey Palace’ — whose ownership was vehemently denied through the 1990s by the late Ms Bhutto, only to be admitted in court by Mr Zardari years later, the latest revelations have officially confirmed what has generally been suspected all along.
How the issue is handled from here on could have far-reaching repercussions for rule of law in Pakistan. If a truly independent commission of inquiry can be formed and allowed to work, with the required terms of reference for an impartial investigation, Pakistan’s institutional setting would receive a tremendous boost that would serve the country well for times to come. If, however, a lame eyewash of an inquiry commission is appointed with beholden and compromised individuals, as widely feared, the culture of impunity with which the rich and powerful operate in Pakistan may well become a permanent feature.
The other major casualty of these revelations will be the tax culture in Pakistan. In the backdrop of the Panama leaks, the government’s moral authority to tax citizens has diminished greatly.
The writer is a former economic adviser to government, and currently heads a macroeconomic consultancy based in Islamabad.

Up to $100bn kept by Pakistanis in offshore companies, moot told

KARACHI: When the Panama leaks hit the headlines in Pakistan suddenly everybody said what was happening and became very emotional, said retired Justice Shaiq Usmani, adding that people forgot that offshore companies had existed even before the 1970s to avoid taxation.
Speaking at a session on the legal and business aspects of the Panama Papers organised by the Pakistan Institute of International Affairs on Thursday evening, Justice Usmani explained that anyone could open an offshore company; the problem started when people who ran your company used public money and parked it there.
For the last several years, he said, this had been happening in Pakistan and other countries. He added that Panama was just one place people had offshore companies, other places include British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands and Bahamas. These places, he explained, were tax-free havens as they had lax tax and secrecy laws which restricted the governments from sharing names. He said that 75 per cent of the world’s shipping industry ships were owned by offshore companies.
“What is the hoopla about? This is just 500 people who didn’t pay their taxes. There are more than 500,000 people here who haven’t,” he said. “What is lost is lost. That money is not going to come back. What the government and lawmakers should have done after the leaks is pass laws and regulations to make sure it didn’t happen again.”
He discussed how offshore companies were an off-shoot of limited liability companies.
He explained how people avoided tax and how it became easier to keep money earned through illegal means such as corruption and criminal activities in offshore accounts.
To discuss the investigative, business and social aspects of the leaks, PIIA had invited former LG minister Sindh Agha Masood Hussain, Prof Dr Tanweer Khalid and AF Ferguson & Company’s Mohammad Raza and Shabbar Zaidi.
Mr Hussain said that there were more than 200 people who had offshore companies in Panama. He added that some people he had spoken to had told him that they kept their money in offshore accounts owing to the unstable situation in the country, security threat as well as for tax evasion.
Dr Tanweer Khalid, a political scientist and faculty dean at Ziauddin University, said: “The Panama Papers are an important milestone in data journalism”. She said it took the journalists one year to investigate and verify the 11.5 million financial papers.
She said it was important to discuss the legal aspect of the Panama Papers to understand how the leaks would affect business and society.
Mohammad Raza claimed that the Panama leaks were just the tip of the iceberg in terms of offshore accounts. “Panama is just one tax haven and this is information from just one firm,” he said, adding that there were several countries and several firms that should be looked into.
Talking about the Panama Papers, he said the information was incomplete as the whistleblower and journalists had only uncovered names — not their financial statements. He said that wide estimates suggested that there could be $70 billion to $100bn kept away in offshore companies.
“This is a blessing in disguise,” he said, adding that now offshore companies and tax evasion could be discussed openly.
“Any company formed outside Pakistan is offshore — but we are talking about companies set up in tax havens such as the Isle of Man etc,” he said. “These are mostly shell companies — this means that they don’t do any business or have money in the country where they have been registered.”
Mr Raza also discussed the foreign exchange regulation and income tax laws in detail.

259 Pakistanis named in fresh Panama Papers leak

KARACHI: Names of 259 Pakistanis with links to offshore companies have surfaced in one of the world’s biggest ever data leaks through an online searchable database made public by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) late Monday evening.

The names in the latest release of documents on the website offshoreleaks.icij.org include:
  • Abdul Sattar Dero, a former general manager of the Port Qasim Authority
  • Shaukat Ahmed, the ex-president of the Karachi Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KCCI)
  • Saba Obaid, mother of renowned filmmaker Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy
  • Irfan Puri, Salman Ahmed
  • Gul Muhammad Tabba
  • Hussain Dawood with sons Abdul Samad Dawood and Shazada Dawood
  • Maya Ismael daughter of the late Inayat Ismael
  • Ali Siddiqui son of banker and stock broker Jahangir Siddiqui
  • Mir Shakil ur Rahman of the Jang Group

Mir Shakil ur Rehman had reportedly said that the company was dormant with no money in it.
The database contains ownership information about companies created in 10 offshore jurisdictions including the British Virgin Islands, the Cook Islands and Singapore. It covers nearly 30 years until 2010.
The database is flooded with traffic from around the world and will take more time to fully sift through.
Obaid-Chinoy responded to a request for comment from Dawn by saying, “I fully support ICIJ and the laudable efforts being made by it… I would, however, like to clarify that in that my name is not mentioned in the Panama leaks and I am neither the legal nor the beneficial owner of any enterprise mentioned in the Panama Papers.”
“There is a mention of my mother, Mrs. Saba Obaid (wife of Late S.M. Obaid) and I say with confidence that the off-shore companies mentioned in the Panama Papers as being owned by my mother are compliant with the applicable laws.”
Some of the names included in the list.
Some of the names included in the list.
While the fresh digital cache includes the names of members of Pakistan’s business elite, it is not immediately ascertainable whether the documents contain names of political heavyweights like the explosive April 3 Panama leaks that named Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s children Maryam, Hassan and Hussain among other world leaders having offshore wealth.
The leaks allege that while he was in opposition, Mr Sharif’s children raised a £7 million loan from Deutsche Bank against four flats in London’s Park Lane owned by offshore companies based in the British Virgin Islands.
The government has since been locked in a bitter battle of words with opposition parties, who are calling for the prime minister to step down. Mr Sharif and his allies have spent much of the past month engaged in a damage control exercise to plead the innocence of the Sharif family.
The Panama Papers, a massive investigation into the secretive offshore companies owned by the world’s political and business elite, sparked controversy in several countries including Pakistan, with Mr Sharif last month offering the formation a judicial commission to probe his family’s alleged links to offshore accounts.
The US-based organisation earlier said the fresh release "will not be a data dump'" of the sort the Wikileaks group became known for.
But it said the current cache includes 200,000 offshore entities set up by wealthy individuals around the world.
The documents are from data given to a German newspaper, Sueddeutsche Zeitung, over a year ago by anonymous source using the name "John Doe".
The data came from nearly four decades of digital archives of one Panamanian law firm specialised in creating and running offshore entities, Mossack Fonseca, which says its computer records were hacked from abroad.
While the ICIJ has released this information in public interest, it clearly maintains that it is not suggesting the people or companies included in the ICIJ Offshore Leaks Database have broken the law or acted improperly. A disclaimer on their website also states “There are legitimate uses for offshore companies and trusts.”
However, the network maintains that its release of records will help to “strip away the secrecy of offshore jurisdictions”.
“Using the offshore economy is akin to acquiring your own island where the rules that most citizens follow don’t apply,” the ICIJ says on its website.
According to the initial release of records, other world leaders having offshore accounts included Russia’s president Vladimir Putin, Iceland’s former PM Sigmundur Davíð Gunnlaugsson as well as British Prime Minister David Cameron's father.

Plan to regularise undeclared assets in offshore firms

ISLAMABAD: The government is working on a package to regularise undeclared assets in offshore companies, tax officials told Dawn on Monday.
The package, to be announced in August, will be finalised and implemented by the Federal Board of Revenue, Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP) and State Bank of Pakistan.
“We have been asked to come up with a plan to regularise offshore and undeclared holdings of potential taxpayers,” a tax official said.
The Tax Reforms Commission had been developing the plan much before the Panama Papers leaks hit the headlines. The statutory period under the income tax law will only extend to five to six years back.
Nearly all Pakistan-linked companies that featured in the Panama Papers were incorporated long before that period.
“There is only one offshore company which may fall within the purview of the existing income tax law,” the official said.

Tax reforms body has proposed 15pc tax with no penalty to allow whitening of undeclared foreign assets


He said the government was hoping to get membership of the Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development to enable tax officials to get information about investment of Pakistanis in foreign countries. The OECD has 34 member countries, including the US and Britain.
The tax official said an FBR delegation would leave for Germany on June 23 to negotiate with the OECD authorities. “We fulfil most of the conditions to become an OECD member.”
He said the proposed package included introduction of two laws for declaration of foreign assets and control of foreign exchange. One law will provide legal cover to the people who have not declared their overseas income and assets.
He said opposition parties would be taken on board before finalising the proposed scheme.
At present, there is no law which binds a person to declare his / her foreign assets.
The Tax Reforms Commission has proposed 15 per cent tax with no penalty to allow whitening of undeclared foreign assets.
Under the proposed law, assets of equivalent value in Pakistan would be forfeited if assets held outside the country were not declared in addition to other severe penalties.
The other law proposes an amendment to the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act (Fera) to get hold of black money kept abroad. Under a new section proposed to be inserted in Fera, equivalent of property in Pakistan can be seized by following a prescribed procedure if a person holds foreign exchange, foreign security or any immovable property outside the country.
The amendment was proposed to get hold of a person who is keeping assets in a tax haven in violation of Fera. The power of seizure under Fera is in addition to the penal action under the Income Tax Ordinance, 2001.
The FBR will take measures to arrest the outflow of untaxed money and assets from the country. The measures will include a close coordination with the State Bank of Pakistan and monitoring of outflow.
The SECP has also proposed certain steps to improve the reporting mechanism for the companies while declaring their foreign assets.

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