Tuesday, September 1, 2020

Video - #KhabarSayAagay #NayaDaur Nawaz, Maryam Corruption Cases: Will The 'Holy Cows' Also Be Held Accountable?

Pakistan blocks five dating apps including Tinder and Grindr

Gibran Naiyyar Peshimam
Pakistan said on Tuesday it has blocked Tinder, Grindr and three other dating apps for not adhering to local laws, its latest move to curb online platforms deemed to be disseminating “immoral content”.
Pakistan, the second largest Muslim-majority country in the world after Indonesia, is an Islamic nation where extra-marital relationships and homosexuality are illegal.
The Pakistan Telecommunications Authority said it has sent notices to the management of the five apps, “keeping in view the negative effects of immoral/indecent content streaming.”
PTA said the notices issued to Tinder, Grindr, Tagged, Skout and SayHi sought the removal of “dating services” and moderation of live streaming content in accordance with local laws.
The companies did not respond to the notices within the stipulated time, the regulator added.
Tinder, Tagged, Skout and Grindr did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Reuters was unable to contact SayHi for comment.
Tinder, a globally popular dating app, is owned by Match Group while Tagged and Skout are owned by the Meet Group.
Grindr, which describes itself as a social networking and online dating application for LGBT people, was cleared to be sold by a Chinese company this year to an investor group called San Vicente Acquisition for $620 million. Data from analytics firm Sensor Tower shows Tinder has been downloaded more than 440,000 times in Pakistan within the last 12 months. Grindr, Tagged and SayHi had each been downloaded about 300,000 times and Skout 100,000 times in that same period.
Critics say Pakistan, using recent digital legislation, has sought to rein in free expression on the internet, blocking or ordering the removal of content deemed immoral as well as news critical of the government and military.
In July, Pakistan issued a “final warning” to short-form video app TikTok over explicit content posted on the platform, while live streaming app Bigo Live was blocked for 10 days for the same reason. Pakistani authorities reiterated that concern to TikTok officials in a recent meeting.
Last week, PTA also asked video-sharing platform YouTube to “immediately block vulgar, indecent, immoral, nude and hate speech content for viewing in Pakistan”.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-pakistan-socialmedia-ban/pakistan-blocks-five-dating-apps-including-tinder-and-grindr-idUSKBN25S618

The ‘Crore Commanders’ of Pakistan army

SUSHANT SAREEN
It was in late October 1998 that Qazi Husain Ahmed, the then Emir of the Jamaat Islami (JI) – the mother-ship of political Islam in Pakistan – for the first time dared the Pakistan army and said the generals are not Corps Commanders but ‘Crore Commanders’. The delectable twist given by the JI chief to the positions held by the most powerful officers of the Pakistan Army succinctly summed up the capture of the Pakistani state, society and economy by the military. But while the term ‘Crore Commanders’ gained wide currency in Pakistan, it was normally used only in hushed tones behind closed doors. Only once in a while would someone use this term in the newspapers to refer to the top brass of the Pakistan army. Two decades later, little has changed.
A recent expose of undisclosed and unexplained wealth of close family members – wife and sons – of former Corps Commander Quetta and current Chairman of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) Authority Lt. Gen. Asim Bajwa has been completely blanked out from the mainstream media of Pakistan. A scandal that should have been the most covered story in newspapers and TV talk shows is conspicuous by its absence, hushed up almost as if it never happened. If at all it is being discussed, it is only on Social Media and online platforms, and even there the ‘deep state’ is doing everything possible to block the social media handles and websites where it is being discussed. The response from Bajwa and his family, the apologists and advocates of all things military in the government, and the troll corps of the army – Bajwa’s contribution to Pakistan’s deteriorating political discourse when he was the DG of Inter-services Public Relations (ISPR) – is along predictable lines.
Bajwa called it a “malicious propaganda story” and “strongly rebutted” it without actually giving a rebuttal. The foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi who is trying very hard to inveigle himself with the military raised doubts over the authenticity of the story. Quite bizarrely, Qureshi claimed that the story was run without conformation even though the journalists who investigated Bajwa’s business produced documentary evidence to back his story. And then there were the troll corps members who immediately labelled it as a conspiracy against CPEC and a R&AW operation, a theme that was also towed by Bajwa’s son. Nobody however refuted the documentary evidence against Bajwa or the misrepresentation by Bajwa of his and his wife’s assets when he filed a declaration after being appointed as Special Assistant to the Prime Minister. Top politicians, including Presidents, Prime Ministers, cabinet ministers, senior civil servants, have been disqualified, even jailed, for much less. But not Bajwa.
That this cover-up is happening under a government that has ostensibly been singularly focussed on accountability and corruption in government speaks volumes for Imran Khan’s version of ‘Riyasat-e-Medina’. The hypocrisy of the current dispensation which has gone with a vengeance after alleged acts of omission and commission of opposition politicians but has been extremely protective and selective of dodgy characters in its own ranks is of course an open secret in Pakistan. Clearly, for Imran Khan corruption is merely a tool for persecuting his opponents and clearing the political field so that he alone can rule till eternity.
The hypocrisy of the current dispensation which has gone with a vengeance after alleged acts of omission and commission of opposition politicians but has been extremely protective and selective of dodgy characters in its own ranks is of course an open secret in Pakistan
But the Asim Bajwa scandal is as much about the selective accountability as it is a statement on the rot that is there in the top echelons of the Pakistan Army, which is not just the largest and most powerful political party in Pakistan and the de facto government, but also the biggest and most diverse business conglomerate and land owner in the country. Most of the time, scandals involving the top military officers, both serving and retired, are buried. Everyone knows what has happened and who is involved, but no one says it openly or publicly. Even so, every once in a while some of the scandals tumble out and become public. But even then, there isn’t really any action taken, unless the officers involved have fallen out of favour or the scandal simply cannot be brushed under the carpet.
Over the last two decades there are any number of serious scandals involving people at the very top of the Pakistan Army’s food chain. What these scandals indicate is only that notwithstanding all their pretensions of being the guardians of Pakistan’s ideological and territorial frontiers, the knights in their Teflon coated uniforms unsullied by corruption and scandal, officers of the Pakistan Army are as prone to dipping their hands in the till as their civilian counterparts. The only difference is that while the civilians are dragged through mud for even the slightest infraction, the military officers remain immune from any such action.
Generals, serving and retired, have been involved in taking handouts from foreign potentates, taking up jobs in foreign companies, getting employed by local businessmen to peddle influence, helping their family members to do dodgy deals, using their positions to trade favours especially with businessmen under a cloud, indulging in good old fashioned extortion and protection rackets especially in disturbed areas like Balochistan, taking commissions on defence contracts (even with the Chinese).
The former military dictator Gen Pervez Musharraf took millions of dollars from the Saudi king to buy apartments in Dubai and London. Another former army chief, Pervez Kiyani, was alleged to have protected shady land deals by his brothers while he was in office. In his book “The Battle for Pakistan” Author Shuja Nawaz mentions rumours about Kayani building up a huge real estate portfolio. Kayani’s successor Raheel Sharif got himself 90 acres of prime agricultural land worth anything between PKR 200 to 400 Crores allotted near the border with India. Although some legislators questioned this land transfer, the military defended it as having been made according to procedure. Raheel also landed himself with a post retirement job as head of a new international force that the Saudis had formed raising eyebrows in Pakistan.
The former ISI chief and ‘super patriot’ Ahmad Shuja Pasha took up a job in Dubai after retirement and got ex-post facto clearance for it after the Supreme Court raised questions over how he and Raheel could take up these jobs without government clearance. Later, Pasha took up another job with a politically active local businessman. Given the preponderant influence of Pakistan Army in virtually every sphere of national life, businesses in the country have figured that employing generals on fat salaries is the surest way to get work done, obtain clearances, browbeat rivals and even clients. The real estate magnate Malik Riaz who boasts that he knows how to ‘put wheels on files’ to make them move through the bureaucratic maze is probably the best example of how services of retired generals are put to use by Pakistani businessmen. He has hired former ISI officers and ISPR heads apart from other high profile retirees to further his business interests.
While post-retirement employment is not illegal, there are serious questions of propriety and conflict of interest that crop up, especially when the generals use their influence to advance commercial interests of their employers. The conflict of interest has also cast a shadow over generals who were responsible for the accountability process, both in the Musharraf regime and after the civilian façade was restored. Two former National Accountability Bureau (NAB) chairmen, both retired 3-star generals, benefited from windfall gains that came their way as a result of LPG quotas allotted to them by a businessman who was being investigated by NAB. A former ISI chief along with other 3-star generals were booked for leasing the land of Pakistan Railways on throwaway price for a golf club in Lahore. Despite references being filed in the case there has been no movement for years. There was a huge furore when allegations of “misconduct, misappropriation, misdemeanour and misadventure” were made against three former generals for causing a loss of around Rs 200 Crore by investing funds of the National Logistics Cell (NLC) in the stock market in exchange of commissions and kickbacks. While the two 3-star generals were let off by a military court, the 2-star general was punished by being ‘dismissed from service’. Incidentally, all three has retired long back and to prevent them from being tried by a civilian court, they were taken back in the army so that they could be tried by a military court.
While post-retirement employment is not illegal, there are serious questions of propriety and conflict of interest that crop up, especially when the generals use their influence to advance commercial interests of their employers.
For the generals, a posting in the troubled Balochistan province or in the commercial capital Karachi is an opportunity to make a killing – literally and financially. In 2016 when nearly a dozen other officers including a 3-star and a 2-star general were sacked on charges of corruption, it exposed the underbelly of the military officers activities in Balochistan. Both the 3-star and the 2-star generals had served as Inspector General of the Frontier Corps which has been virtually calling the shots in the province. The 3-star general, Obaidullah Khattak, was alleged to have made Rs 1500 Crores in his three years as IGFC. His successor, Maj. Gen. Ejaz Shahid was made to deposit Rs 5 Crores with the GHQ as punishment. Obviously this amount was a fraction of the money the general made as IGFC. The generals in Balochistan are alleged to be involved in drug smuggling, general smuggling – Ejaz Shahid had procured a non-custom duty paid fancy sports car for his son and it was an accident of this car that blew the whole scam in public – protection rackets, extortion, and every other illegal activity possible. Incidentally, the news of the action taken against the officers was released to the public by none other than the man who is today being accused of having amassed an unexplained fortune not commensurate with his known sources of income – Lt. Gen. Asim Bajwa.
The involvement of Pakistani generals in drug trafficking goes back to the 1980s. During the Afghan jihad against the erstwhile Soviet Union, heroin smuggling and gun-running were the biggest businesses in the tribal belt along the Afghan border. A former Corps Commander and later governor of NWFP, Fazle Haq, was one of the lynch-pins of the drug trade. In the 1990s the then army and ISI chiefs made a proposal to the then Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to use the proceeds of narcotics trade to fund the covert military operations of the Pakistan army. In Karachi, the modus operandi is different. Ever Corps Commander is believed to turn into an overnight stock market genius. The way this happens is that one or more of the top stock market players (all politically well connected) offer to invest a modest amount of money for a new Corps Commander. Within months the money starts to grow exponentially and by the time the tenure ends, the general is a billionaire.
The greed of the generals and other officers is despite the fact that they receive fabulous benefits throughout their careers and at retirement. In her book ‘Military Inc.’, Pakistani author Ayesha Siddiqa has estimated that the market value of properties belonging to senior generals is anywhere between Rs 15-40 Crores. This, if they don’t do any corruption at all. But greed being limitless, the Pakistan Army wants to have a finger in every pie, the latest being the CPEC project which the military and its generals see as a cash cow to further institutional and individual interests. But even otherwise, the business arms of the military – banks, logistics firms, real estate development, construction companies, bakeries, marriage halls, industrial concerns – have a virtual run of the country, landing lucrative government contracts and having the ability to edge out competition.
It is therefore not without reason that the term ‘Crore Commanders’ has stuck to the generals of the Pakistan Army. As the wags in Pakistan often say, if it were left to the generals – whom they refer to as real estate agents – they would even extend their lucrative Defence Housing Authority (DHA) Schemes beyond the border with India. And they add for good measure that with DHA schemes coming up close to the border, no Pakistan Army general can afford a war with India. After all, they can’t risk their properties, can they?
https://www.orfonline.org/expert-speak/the-crore-commanders-of-pakistan-army-72492/

What’s Pakistan without Saudi loan, oil and free royal jet rides for Imran Khan?



Pakistan was asked to repay $1bn of the Saudi loan, which it did by borrowing from China, but Qureshi called it an economic favour to the Arab nation in Covid-19.

If only Pakistani diplomacy was like Ertugrul drama series. Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi is definitely not playing a warrior who can conquer nations with a sword. Or in his case, with words. Just ask the Pakistani Army Chief Qamar Javed Bajwa who now has to pick up the pieces and fix the mess Quereshi has created with Saudi Arabia.
There is loan, there is oil. And what is Pakistan without Saudi loans and oil? Well, there is always Kashmir, of course.
In a charged Kashmir-lost-and-not-found atmosphere on 5 August 2020, Quereshi threatened Saudi Arabia-led Organisation of Islamic Countries (OIC) that if Kashmir is not taken up at the ministerial level, then Pakistan will move forward “with or without” the Saudis. He was hinting at the Malaysian-Iranian-Turkish Muslim bloc that has been vocal on Kashmir post abrogation of Article 370 by India last year. His statement was a result of a year-long Pakistani frustration at not getting its way on Kashmir in the OIC because of India’s economic clout.
Pakistan was asked to repay $1billion of the Saudi loan, which it did by borrowing from China, but before Qureshi called it an economic favour to Saudi Arabia in the Covid-19 pandemic. Really? Pakistan donating money to Saudi Arabia is a bigger insult to the desert kingdom than forging another OIC without them. And, what’s worse, ARY News channel and its social media platforms censored foreign minister Qureshi by taking his comments down.
Pakistan, leader of Islamic ummah?
Pakistan nurses the grand delusion of being a self-proclaimed leader of Islamic ummah because it is a nuclear power. Pakistan believes it can mediate between Iran and Saudi Arabia, or can even smooth things up between the US and Iran, or end the war in Yemen. Like how? When you don’t have a penny in the pocket but you want to take up others’ causes instead of fixing your own house.But after Quereshi’s outburst against Saudi Arabia, will the free rides in the Saudi crown prince Mohammed bin Salman’s personal jet come to an end for Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan? Or will this incident be another slap on the wrist, like one in Kuala Lumpur last year for trying to be part of an Islamic coalition?
But the more important question is: will the other Islamic brother-countries, like Turkey or Malaysia, pick up the tab for self-styled leader of Muslim world, Pakistan, the way Saudis did?
The Pakistan-Saudi bonding
It was in 2018 that the cash-strapped government of Imran Khan was extended a $6.2 billion package by Saudi Arabia. This included $3 billion in loans and oil on deferred payments worth $3.2 billion. These deals were sealed during the much-hyped visit of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to Pakistan last February. Now, Saudi Arabia has stopped the oil supply after the deferred payments deal expired.
For decades, Pakistan relied on Saudi Arabia financially and it used the religious and cultural front to boost those ties. During the February 2019 visit when the Imran-MBS bromance was peaking, PM himself had driven the crown prince from the airport. Khan had told MBS that he was so popular in Pakistan that he could win an election here. Lucky us. Not holding back in niceties, the Crown Prince declared himself an ambassador of Pakistan in Saudi Arabia. Couldn’t believe the nation’s luck. Later, both were seen in a horse-drawn carriage, giving an image of happily-ever-afters. But then, there are no happily-ever-afters in real life.The Pakistani journalists who had put up the photo of slain Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi as their Twitter display pictures to show solidarity were hounded by the Pakistani government agencies for leading a social media campaign against the royal Saudi guest. Those were the days. Pakistan couldn’t tolerate such insult to the Kingdom. PM Imran Khan had his priorities clear: Pakistan was desperate and the government needed Saudi loans to avoid defaulting. Khan had attended the 2018 Riyadh investment summit even when several others had dropped out.
Every country watches its own political and economic interests first, but for some strange reason, Pakistan thinks every country should put their ‘Kashmir banega Pakistan’ interest first.
Muslim lives matter, but not in China
Imran Khan and his government stays silent over the persecution of Uighurs Muslims in China. Khan chooses to turn the other way saying: ‘Frankly, I don’t know much about it’. The reason for Pakistan’s silence over Uighurs is simple: China is a benefactor, you cannot offend China. Pakistan is indebted to China so the passion for ‘Muslim lives matter’ doesn’t apply here. Unfortunately, that is how human rights issues work.
Similarly, Saudi Arabia has economic interests in India. For Saudis, India is a viable economic partner, not a country that depends on it for bailout packages. And that Saudi Arabia is India’s fourth-largest trade partner doesn’t help Pakistan’s cause either. Same applies to Gulf countries, like the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, who also by the way, have generously extended loans to Pakistan. But the claims that Imran Khan would never ask for bheek and prefer to commit suicide over it never stand because that is exactly what Pakistan has done for survival. Beggars can’t be equal partners.
https://theprint.in/opinion/letter-from-pakistan/whats-pakistan-without-saudi-loan-oil-and-free-royal-jet-rides-for-imran-khan/480517/

CPEC chief Asim Bajwa may have amassed corrupt wealth, but Pakistani media blacked it out


By SUSHANT SAREEN
Foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi, who is trying very hard to inveigle himself with the military, raised doubts over the authenticity of the story. It was in late October 1998 that Qazi Husain Ahmed, the then Emir of the Jamaat Islami (JI) – the mother-ship of political Islam in Pakistan – for the first time dared the Pakistan army and said the generals are not Corps Commanders but ‘Crore Commanders’. The delectable twist given by the JI chief to the positions held by the most powerful officers of the Pakistan Army succinctly summed up the capture of the Pakistani state, society and economy by the military. But while the term ‘Crore Commanders’ gained wide currency in Pakistan, it was normally used only in hushed tones behind closed doors. Only once in a while would someone use this term in the newspapers to refer to the top brass of the Pakistan army. Two decades later, little has changed.
A recent expose of undisclosed and unexplained wealth of close family members – wife and sons – of former Corps Commander Quetta and current Chairman of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) Authority Lt. Gen. Asim Bajwa has been completely blanked out from the mainstream media of Pakistan. A scandal that should have been the most covered story in newspapers and TV talk shows is conspicuous by its absence, hushed up almost as if it never happened. If at all it is being discussed, it is only on Social Media and online platforms, and even there the ‘deep state’ is doing everything possible to block the social media handles and websites where it is being discussed. The response from Bajwa and his family, the apologists and advocates of all things military in the government, and the troll corps of the army – Bajwa’s contribution to Pakistan’s deteriorating political discourse when he was the DG of Inter-services Public Relations (ISPR) – is along predictable lines.
Bajwa called it a “malicious propaganda story” and “strongly rebutted” it without actually giving a rebuttal. The foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi who is trying very hard to inveigle himself with the military raised doubts over the authenticity of the story. Quite bizarrely, Qureshi claimed that the story was run without conformation even though the journalists who investigated Bajwa’s business produced documentary evidence to back his story. And then there were the troll corps members who immediately labelled it as a conspiracy against CPEC and a R&AW operation, a theme that was also towed by Bajwa’s son. Nobody however refuted the documentary evidence against Bajwa or the misrepresentation by Bajwa of his and his wife’s assets when he filed a declaration after being appointed as Special Assistant to the Prime Minister. Top politicians, including Presidents, Prime Ministers, cabinet ministers, senior civil servants, have been disqualified, even jailed, for much less. But not Bajwa.
That this cover-up is happening under a government that has ostensibly been singularly focussed on accountability and corruption in government speaks volumes for Imran Khan’s version of ‘Riyasat-e-Medina’. The hypocrisy of the current dispensation which has gone with a vengeance after alleged acts of omission and commission of opposition politicians but has been extremely protective and selective of dodgy characters in its own ranks is of course an open secret in Pakistan. Clearly, for Imran Khan corruption is merely a tool for persecuting his opponents and clearing the political field so that he alone can rule till eternity.
But the Asim Bajwa scandal is as much about the selective accountability as it is a statement on the rot that is there in the top echelons of the Pakistan Army, which is not just the largest and most powerful political party in Pakistan and the de facto government, but also the biggest and most diverse business conglomerate and land owner in the country. Most of the time, scandals involving the top military officers, both serving and retired, are buried. Everyone knows what has happened and who is involved, but no one says it openly or publicly. Even so, every once in a while some of the scandals tumble out and become public. But even then, there isn’t really any action taken, unless the officers involved have fallen out of favour or the scandal simply cannot be brushed under the carpet.
Over the last two decades there are any number of serious scandals involving people at the very top of the Pakistan Army’s food chain. What these scandals indicate is only that notwithstanding all their pretensions of being the guardians of Pakistan’s ideological and territorial frontiers, the knights in their Teflon coated uniforms unsullied by corruption and scandal, officers of the Pakistan Army are as prone to dipping their hands in the till as their civilian counterparts. The only difference is that while the civilians are dragged through mud for even the slightest infraction, the military officers remain immune from any such action.
Generals, serving and retired, have been involved in taking handouts from foreign potentates, taking up jobs in foreign companies, getting employed by local businessmen to peddle influence, helping their family members to do dodgy deals, using their positions to trade favours especially with businessmen under a cloud, indulging in good old fashioned extortion and protection rackets especially in disturbed areas like Balochistan, taking commissions on defence contracts (even with the Chinese). The former military dictator Gen Pervez Musharraf took millions of dollars from the Saudi king to buy apartments in Dubai and London. Another former army chief, Pervez Kiyani, was alleged to have protected shady land deals by his brothers while he was in office. In his book “The Battle for Pakistan” Author Shuja Nawaz mentions rumours about Kayani building up a huge real estate portfolio. Kayani’s successor Raheel Sharif got himself 90 acres of prime agricultural land worth anything between PKR 200 to 400 Crores allotted near the border with India. Although some legislators questioned this land transfer, the military defended it as having been made according to procedure. Raheel also landed himself with a post retirement job as head of a new international force that the Saudis had formed raising eyebrows in Pakistan.
The former ISI chief and ‘super patriot’ Ahmad Shuja Pasha took up a job in Dubai after retirement and got ex-post facto clearance for it after the Supreme Court raised questions over how he and Raheel could take up these jobs without government clearance. Later, Pasha took up another job with a politically active local businessman. Given the preponderant influence of Pakistan Army in virtually every sphere of national life, businesses in the country have figured that employing generals on fat salaries is the surest way to get work done, obtain clearances, browbeat rivals and even clients. The real estate magnate Malik Riaz who boasts that he knows how to ‘put wheels on files’ to make them move through the bureaucratic maze is probably the best example of how services of retired generals are put to use by Pakistani businessmen. He has hired former ISI officers and ISPR heads apart from other high profile retirees to further his business interests.
While post-retirement employment is not illegal, there are serious questions of propriety and conflict of interest that crop up, especially when the generals use their influence to advance commercial interests of their employers. The conflict of interest has also cast a shadow over generals who were responsible for the accountability process, both in the Musharraf regime and after the civilian façade was restored. Two former National Accountability Bureau (NAB) chairmen, both retired 3-star generals, benefited from windfall gains that came their way as a result of LPG quotas allotted to them by a businessman who was being investigated by NAB. A former ISI chief along with other 3-star generals were booked for leasing the land of Pakistan Railways on throwaway price for a golf club in Lahore. Despite references being filed in the case there has been no movement for years. There was a huge furore when allegations of “misconduct, misappropriation, misdemeanour and misadventure” were made against three former generals for causing a loss of around Rs 200 Crore by investing funds of the National Logistics Cell (NLC) in the stock market in exchange of commissions and kickbacks. While the two 3-star generals were let off by a military court, the 2-star general was punished by being ‘dismissed from service’. Incidentally, all three has retired long back and to prevent them from being tried by a civilian court, they were taken back in the army so that they could be tried by a military court. For the generals, a posting in the troubled Balochistan province or in the commercial capital Karachi is an opportunity to make a killing – literally and financially. In 2016 when nearly a dozen other officers including a 3-star and a 2-star general were sacked on charges of corruption, it exposed the underbelly of the military officers activities in Balochistan. Both the 3-star and the 2-star generals had served as Inspector General of the Frontier Corps which has been virtually calling the shots in the province. The 3-star general, Obaidullah Khattak, was alleged to have made Rs 1500 Crores in his three years as IGFC. His successor, Maj. Gen. Ejaz Shahid was made to deposit Rs 5 Crores with the GHQ as punishment. Obviously this amount was a fraction of the money the general made as IGFC. The generals in Balochistan are alleged to be involved in drug smuggling, general smuggling – Ejaz Shahid had procured a non-custom duty paid fancy sports car for his son and it was an accident of this car that blew the whole scam in public – protection rackets, extortion, and every other illegal activity possible. Incidentally, the news of the action taken against the officers was released to the public by none other than the man who is today being accused of having amassed an unexplained fortune not commensurate with his known sources of income – Lt. Gen. Asim Bajwa.
The involvement of Pakistani generals in drug trafficking goes back to the 1980s. During the Afghan jihad against the erstwhile Soviet Union, heroin smuggling and gun-running were the biggest businesses in the tribal belt along the Afghan border. A former Corps Commander and later governor of NWFP, Fazle Haq, was one of the lynch-pins of the drug trade. In the 1990s the then army and ISI chiefs made a proposal to the then Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to use the proceeds of narcotics trade to fund the covert military operations of the Pakistan army. In Karachi, the modus operandi is different. Ever Corps Commander is believed to turn into an overnight stock market genius. The way this happens is that one or more of the top stock market players (all politically well connected) offer to invest a modest amount of money for a new Corps Commander. Within months the money starts to grow exponentially and by the time the tenure ends, the general is a billionaire.
The greed of the generals and other officers is despite the fact that they receive fabulous benefits throughout their careers and at retirement. In her book ‘Military Inc.’, Pakistani author Ayesha Siddiqa has estimated that the market value of properties belonging to senior generals is anywhere between Rs 15-40 Crores. This, if they don’t do any corruption at all. But greed being limitless, the Pakistan Army wants to have a finger in every pie, the latest being the CPEC project which the military and its generals see as a cash cow to further institutional and individual interests. But even otherwise, the business arms of the military – banks, logistics firms, real estate development, construction companies, bakeries, marriage halls, industrial concerns – have a virtual run of the country, landing lucrative government contracts and having the ability to edge out competition.
It is therefore not without reason that the term ‘Crore Commanders’ has stuck to the generals of the Pakistan Army. As the wags in Pakistan often say, if it were left to the generals – whom they refer to as real estate agents – they would even extend their lucrative Defence Housing Authority (DHA) Schemes beyond the border with India. And they add for good measure that with DHA schemes coming up close to the border, no Pakistan Army general can afford a war with India. After all, they can’t risk their properties, can they?
https://theprint.in/opinion/cpec-chief-asim-bajwa-may-have-amassed-corrupt-wealth-but-pakistani-media-blacked-it-out/493389/