Shaukat Tarin booked in sedition case for ‘derailing’ IMF deal
Staff Report
ISLAMABAD: The Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) on Monday booked former finance minister Shaukat Tarin in a sedition case pertaining to his alleged attempt to derail a deal with the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
In August, a pair of audio leaks had surfaced in which a man, purportedly Tarin, was heard guiding Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Punjab finance ministers, belonging to the PTI, to tell the coalition government in the Centre and the IMF that they would not be able to commit to a provincial budget surplus in light of the monsoon floods that wrought havoc across Pakistan.
In a notice issued to Tarin in September, the FIA said an inquiry had been initiated against his alleged role on the basis of the audio leak.
The FIA, which completed a preliminary inquiry into Tarin’s audio leaks, reportedly saw his leaked conversations as an “attempt to disrupt” the IMF loan programme and funds, thereby causing harm to the national interest. It had subsequently approached the government with the request to initiate legal proceedings against the ex-finance czar.
On Sunday, Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah said that the government has given FIA permission to arrest Tarin.
The first information report (FIR), registered by the sub-inspector of FIA’s cybercrime on Monday, said that Tarin with “malafide intentions and ulterior motives” induced sitting provincial finance ministers of Punjab and KP — Taimur Jhagra and Mohsin Leghari.
It recalled that two phone call audio clips of the former finance minister with Leghari and Jhagra, which had gone viral, were thoroughly heard and analysed.
“Shaukat Tarin clearly asked the finance ministers to write letters stating that their respective ministries will not return the surplus budget to the federal government, which will critically affect the then ongoing deals between the Government of Pakistan and IMF regarding the economic situation of the state,” the complaint stated.
“Such mischievous acts may disrupt public tranquillity and create an ill-will among pillars of the state. It is likely to cause a sense of fear, alarm and intimidation to every citizen of the state due to the economic situation of Pakistan. Thus, the alleged conversation is considered an act of sedition against the state,” the FIR said.
In the alleged phone calls, the man thought of to be Tarin was asking Mohsin Leghari and Taimur Jhagra to do a volte-face citing provincial surplus.