REFERENCE / COMPLAINT
NO. X

Reference dated 19-8-2004
– Wheat Scandal
To:
The Chairman
National Accountability Bureau
President’s Secretariat
Islamabad
Pakistan Peoples Party
......COMPLAINANT
V/s
1. Sardar Yar Muhammad Rindh,
Minister for Food, Agriculture and Livestock, Government of Pakistan
2. Secretary M/o Food,
Agriculture and Livestock
3. Chairman, National
Agriculture Research Officer -------ACCUSED/RESPONDENTS
Subject:
Complaint under section 5 and 18 (b) sub
section – ii of the National ACCOUNTABILITY BUREAU (NAB) ORDINANCE 1999 against
the holders of public office for punishment under Section 10 of NAB Ordinance
for causing huge financial loss to the national exchequer by corruption and
corrupt practices
1. The respondents in this
complaint do fall within the ambit of NAB Ordinance 1999 for the purposes of
investigation trial and punishment.
2. The respondents are
reportedly guilty of corruption and corrupt practices as defined in Section 9 of
the Ordinance and as such are subject to punishment under Section 10 of the
Ordinance based upon the following facts and grounds:
Facts and Grounds:
According to a news item
reported by Kamran Khan in THE NEWS dated 27 April 2004 (copy enclosed),
revealed that 1.5 million tons of wheat was being imported for consumption in
Pakistan which was to reach Pakistan to meet the shortage in the country. The
Respondents and their accomplices rejected the wheat on the grounds that it had
in effected with deadly karnel bunt virus which caused a heavy shortage in the
country and the prices has gone up to Rs. 20 per Kg and thereby the black
marketers earned at least Rs. 3 billions profit.
That as per report the wheat
rejected by M/o Food and Agriculture, Livestock was subsequently consumed by
United Arab Emirates, Indonesia and Sri Lanka where their governments ignored
the Pakistani rejection and purchased same wheat on the basis of their own lab
tests that did not confirmed statements by the Pakistani officials regarding the
virus diseases.
The Report reveals that
surprisingly he Government even rejected the advice of its own experts pointed
out that no virus was detected in the Australian consignment in test carried out
by expert of Pakistan Institute of Nuclear Science and Technology.
The Australian Government
had intention to file a law suit against the Pakistan Government which would
also cause financial burden to Government of Pakistan.
The scam apparently shows
that the Respondents and accomplices deliberately for the personal and their
associates benefit rejected the Australian wheat cause shortage in the country
and earned more than three billion rupees by illegal means and has caused
financial loss to the National exchequer and people of Pakistan thus having
committed an offence of corruption and corrupt practices and are liable to the
trial and conviction under the NAB Ordinance 1999.
Conclusion:
Based on the above facts and
grounds respondents have shown willful indulgence in corrupt practices under
Section 9 of the Ordinance. Such persons are subject to punishment under Section
10 of the Ordinance.
As such the Chairman of the
NAB is called upon to initiate investigation in connection with the matters set
out herein above and further proceed to file a reference against respondents for
violating the provisions of Section 9 of the Ordinance punishable under Section
10 of the Ordinance in competent court of law and proceed against those
concerned for violating Section 9 of the Ordinance.
Complainant
Pakistan Peoples Party
Through:
(Syed Nayyer Hussain Bukhari
Advocate)
Islamabad Dated: 19-8-2004
The Reference / Complaint is based on the source incorporated as under :
Who orchestrated Rs
3bn profits for wheat hoarders?
UAE, Indonesia, Sri Lanka consuming Pakistan-rejected wheat
The News dated 27 April 2004
By Kamran Khan
KARACHI: The rejection of 15
lakh tonnes of Australian wheat by the Ministry of Food, Agriculture and
Livestock (MINFAL) — a decision that skyrocketed the flour prices in Sindh to Rs
20 per kg and earned at least Rs three billion profit to wheat black marketers
in late February — is now shaping into a major scandal for the Jamali
government, according to interviews with related officials, informed sources and
documents available with this correspondent.
The Australian wheat
consignment rejected by Pakistan in the last week of February is now being
consumed by the citizens of the United Arab Emirates, Indonesia and Sri Lanka
where the governments simply ignored the Pakistani rejection and purchased the
same wheat on the basis of their own lab tests that did not confirm media
statements by Pakistani officials that the Australian wheat was massively
infected with the deadly Karnal Bunt virus, according to the documentary
confirmation received from all three states.
Loaded with the lab tests in
the UAE, Indonesia, Sri Lanka and two other top grain testing facilities in the
United States and the UK, the Australian Wheat Board (AWB) is preparing an
international lawsuit against the government of Pakistan for defaming its most
important export, informed sources said. Australia has an annual wheat export of
about US$3 billion.
The government’s decision to
reject 1.5 million tonnes of Australian wheat consignment worth US$33 million
created a stir in the wheat market in February, where wheat stockists and flour
mill owners kicked the prices up to the levels never witnessed in Pakistan. As
flour reached the price level of Rs 20 per kg, people took to the streets in the
interior of Sindh.
In March, soon after the
Australian wheat rejection by the government, wheat was being sold at about Rs
12,000 per tonne against an average wheat price of Rs 10,000 per tonne in
December "You can identify the wheat stockists and a group of Karachi flour
mills owners who pocketed a whopping Rs 300 crore profit between January and
March this year," acknowledged a Karachi flour mill owner, who had the names of
the key profiteers on his finger tips.
A lethal Karnal Bunt virus
had been detected in Australian wheat consignment by the MINFAL-run National
Agriculture Research Council (NARC) labs in February this year. The Australians
challenged the NARC result by requesting that a second test may also be
conducted at any world-renowned facility, a request turned down by the
government.
Surprisingly, it has now
been discovered that the government also rejected advice from some of its own
experts who pointed out that no virus was detected in the Australian consignment
in the separate tests carried out by the experts at Pakistan Institute of
Nuclear Science and Technology (PINSTECH) armed with state-of-the-art testing
equipment.
The government also turned a
deaf ear to another test, rejecting Karnal Bunt presence in the wheat, by
another renowned Karachi facility called Qualitest, the lab that makes
certifications for the government of Pakistan for its wheat export consignments.
The certificate issued by the Australian Wheat Board and its testing agency were
dealt with abrupt rejection by the MINFAL .
After several years of
surplus wheat crop in the country, Pakistani officials had anticipated a
shortfall of about two million tonnes in the annual demand of about 19 million
tonne wheat for the current year. The shortfall early this year caused a major
flour crisis all over the country early this year as Pakistanis were forced to
buy flour, at times, double the normal price, particularly in Sindh, the worst
affected province.
The Australian consignment
of 15 lakh tonnes of wheat reached Pakistan ports at the peak of wheat demand.
In February, commodity analysts expected distribution of the consignment, mostly
in Sindh, to calm the flour prices and ease the supply side of wheal till the
time Sindh’s own wheat crop hit the market.
The dramatic government
rejection opened floodgates of profit for wheat hoarders, who apparently had the
firm inside information that the Australian wheat would never reach the market,
interviews with relevant sources disclosed.
MINFAL officials maintain
that their rejection of Australian wheat was valid, because the consignment was
twice rejected in lab tests, conducted each time at the NARC. The second test at
the NARC, MINFAL officials said, was carried out in the presence of Australian
experts. Australian experts though have reported that their observations on
testing techniques were ignored by the NARC experts and their presence during
the test was that of silent witnesses.
Australian wheat consignment
rejection appears mysterious, more so because shipping documents that have
reached Pakistan recently showed that only a week before the rejection of the
Australian wheat, the government of Pakistan had accepted 25,000 tonnes of wheat
that had reached Pakistan from the same wheat storage facility at the same
Australian port of loading.
Pakistan had received this
wheat consignment from the same Australian source under the World Food Program.
5,000 tonnes of this consignment was distributed in Sindh, while the rest of the
consignment went to Balochistan and the NWFP.
The wheat row between
Pakistan and Australia had reached the highest levels of the two government in
February with Australian Prime Minister John Howard calling President Pervez
Musharraf on telephone to seek his personal intervention in the matter, and
President Musharraf had referred the matter to Prime Minister Jamali.
The rejection of Australian
wheat consignment was confirmed in a cabinet meeting where the MINFAL minister
Yar Muhammad Rind had made a categorical statement about the presence of deadly
Karnal Bunt virus in the Australian wheat, warning the cabinet about the
repercussions of spread of infected wheat in the masses.
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