REFERENCE / COMPLAINT
NO. VIII

Reference dated August 1, 2005
– Ishratul Ebad
1 August 2005
The Chairman
National Accountability Bureau
Islamabad
Subject:
Complaint under section 5 and 18 (b) sub section - II of the
National
Accountability Bureau Ordinance 1999
Dear Sir,
The undersigned is enclosing
herewith copy of a news item published in the "Daily Telegraph London" in its
publication dated 12 June 2005.
The said news item reflects that
Dr Ishrat-ul-Ebad, an activist of MQM and now the Governor of the Province of
Sindh, appointed by General Pervaiz Musharaf, and has been receiving monetary
benefits from the Benefit Office of the UK even after appointment to the
esteemed office of Governor of Sindh.
The admission on the part of Dr
Ebad, that he and his family had been receiving the social benefits is apparent
misuse of power and corrupt practice, which could be probed into, in accordance
with the provisions of NAB Ordinance 1999.
You are therefore requested that
the above matter may be investigated and the culprit may be prosecuted
accordingly.
Sincerely
Ch. Mohammad Aslam
Advocate High Court
On behalf of
Pakistan Peoples Party
Daily
Telegraph London
12
June 2005
This man is the governor of a province in Pakistan. He lives in a huge mansion
surrounded by servants. So why were we paying him £1,000 a month in benefits?
By Daniel Foggo and Massoud Ansari in Karachi
(Filed: 12/06/2005)
The two-storey stone mansion
that Dr Ishrat-Ul-Ebad Khan lives in as the governor of the Pakistani province
of Sindh is surrounded by magnificent lawns and protected by armed guards.
It has two grand entrances,
more than a dozen bedrooms, oak floors in the main reception rooms and separate
quarters for the staff who see to Dr Khan's every need.
As a senior Pakistani
politican, Dr Khan has been photographed beside President Pervez Musharraf, is
chauffeured in Mercedes limousines and was inaugurated as governor of his
country's second largest province with much pomp almost three years ago.
Yet for almost 10 months
while Dr Khan was enjoying the comforts and privileges that go with high office,
his family was receiving money from the British benefits system, including
income support of about £1,000 a month.
An investigation by The
Sunday Telegraph has revealed that British taxpayers also funded the £244-a-week
rent on a house in Edgware, north-west London, that Dr Khan keeps as a base for
his family in Britain.
When confronted by this
newspaper, Dr Khan admitted that since taking up his position in December 2002,
he had received benefits to which he was not entitled. But he insisted that he
had refunded the overpayment. Neither he nor his family is now claiming any
benefits, and they have not done so since October 2003 when Mrs Khan went to
join him in Pakistan, he said.
Dr Khan, who trained at
Sindh Medical College in Karachi and has also been a housing minister in
Pakistan, came to Britain in 1992 as an asylum seeker. He fled after being
accused by the then government of involvement in murder and kidnap offences.
Following the acceptance of
his asylum claim in 1999, Dr Khan, who is aligned with the pro-Musharraf Mohajir
Qaumi Movement (MQM), was entitled to a range of welfare benefits.
From 1997 he and his family
lived in a pebble-dashed semi-detached corner house in Edgware, and in May 1999
they began claiming income support, which entitled him to payments, such as
housing benefit.
His wife, Shaheena, also
received benefits because she had a stress disorder, and extra money was added
on to allow Dr Khan, who did not have a job, to care for her full time.
By 2002, however, the
political situation in Pakistan had changed markedly, with Gen Musharraf having
replaced President Ishaq Khan. In December of that year the doctor was invited
by the general to become governor of Sindh, and he was inaugurated on December
27.
Records show, however, that
he and his wife continued to receive benefits for 10 months.
When contacted by this
newspaper, Mrs Khan, who continues to divide her time between the palace in
Pakistan and the house in Edgware, claimed that she had written to notify the
authorities that her husband had left the country "a few weeks" after his
departure.
She said: "His recall was
very sudden and we were not sure how long it would last and whether he would
stay or not. I didn't write straight away but within about a month to say he had
left."
Without his presence their
benefits should have been approximately halved. This did not happen, however
because, she said, the authorities did not reply.
She said: "When I got no
reply I assumed they were taking their time making a decision and so I continued
to cash the cheques as normal. Some months later I finally went into the
benefits office and told them he was no longer with me and then they sent us a
request for repayment, which we paid."
Benefit office records show
that she contacted the authorities in October 2003 and told them that her
husband had left Britain on September 28 for a period of four months and that
she herself would be leaving on October 22. Benefit officials calculated that
small repayments, relating to benefits paid since September 28, were therefore
due.
In fact, by September 28,
2003 Dr Khan had been the governor of Sindh for almost nine months, during which
time he had performed official duties ranging from inaugurating a national
immunisation campaign against polio to visiting Saudi Arabia, where he enjoyed
the hospitality of the royal family.
He made trips to London to
visit his family during that period, including the week prior to September 28.
Dr Khan said that he had
repaid a matter of "a few hundred pounds" to the social security authorities but
he was keen to make sure that any money that might still be outstanding was
reimbursed.
"Since you have raised this,
I will be writing to the social security officials to clarify the situation," he
said.
"If anything has been done,
even inadvertently, I would very much like to rectify it. But in our opinion we
have not tried to misguide or mislead." Three of the Khans' four children still
live at the Edgware house and attend full-time education in Britain. Dr Khan
said that the house was owned by a friend.
In the meantime, Dr Khan,
who earns 35,000 rupees (£350) a month - the average Pakistani earns 25,000
rupees a year - lives in a colonial-era house, located in the heart of the port
city. The house sits in a dozen acres and is guarded by the gun-carrying men of
the Pakistan frontier constabulary. Packed with art treasures, it has a
billiards room and tennis courts.
After he was appointed
governor, all former criminal accusations against him were dropped. Now he is
responsible for appointing judges and can also pardon convicts.
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