NAB has recovered $30 billion since 2023

About 165,000 Pakistani students study abroad but very few pay taxes in Pakistan, NAB chief noted

ISLAMABAD:

National Accountability Bureau (NAB) chairman Lt Gen (retd) Nazir Ahmad Butt has said that the top accountability watchdog will approach Parliament with a request to reduce the current threshold of Rs 500 million required to initiate action in corruption cases.

“NAB will ask Parliament to lower this threshold as many have started planning corruption below Rs500 million to evade prosecution,” the NAB chief said on Tuesday in his first press briefing since taking charge of the organization in March 2023.

Following the ouster of the PTI-led federal government in April 2022, the PML-N-led coalition government amended the National Accountability Ordinance (NAO) 1999, limiting NAB’s jurisdiction to cases involving alleged corruption over Rs 500 million.

During the briefing, the NAB chairman presented a performance review of the agency and said that no other institution in the country had made recoveries as large as NAB.

He said that from its establishment in 1999 till March 2023, NAB had recovered $3.15 billion. However, during his two-and-a-half-year tenure, NAB recovered a whopping $29.99 billion. These recoveries include cash recoveries of Rs1.124 billion (about $4 billion), while the rest was recovered in the form of assets.

“In the last 26 years, the government has provided NAB Rs62 billion while the agency has recovered Rs9 trillion, making its performance unmatched by any anti-corruption agency in the world,” he claimed.

He lamented that those looting Pakistan’s wealth are investing their money in USA, Europe, Canada and other countries where no one questions them.

About 165,000 Pakistani students study abroad, but very few pay taxes in Pakistan, he noted.

“These countries have become safe havens for laundered money,” he said, adding that even when NAB requests data, it sometimes takes up to seven years to receive a response, and information is often withheld under the pretext of protecting “politically vulnerable individuals”.

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