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Wednesday, June 19 2013
Modern Russian Czars
WHO knew that what corrupt Russian officials care about, more than just about anything, is getting their assets and themselves out of their own country? They own homes in Saint Tropez, fly to Miami for vacation and set up bank accounts in Switzerland ...
THE WHITE HOUSE ARGUMENT
I'VE been critical of President Obama's budgets. I've argued that while I like the way Obama preserves spending on things like scientific research and programs for the vulnerable, he doesn't do enough to avoid a debt crisis. I've based that argument on certain facts ...
Al Watan - Arabic Newspaper
Jamila - Monthly Women Magazine
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Dawn seeks impartial probe into Musa case

IANS ISLAMABAD

PRIME Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani’s son Musa Gilani may have “curried favour” and been involved in wrongdoing but “only an impartial investigation can unearth the facts” in the Rs 7 billion pharma scam, said a leading Pakistani daily.

An editorial in the Dawn on Wednesday said that “excess and abuse of power are apparently two sides of the same coin regardless of who tosses it”.

“In the controversial case involving ephedrine release to two pharmaceutical companies under investigation by the Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF), first it was the prime minister who summarily dismissed senior ANF officials who were investigating the case. This was done seemingly to thwart investigations by the force, which allegedly led to the PM’s son Ali Musa Gilani.

“And now it is the ANF officials who took the case of their peers’ dismissal to court and started acting in a questionable manner,” it said.

The daily said that the letter sent by the ANF inquiry officer to the PM Secretariat asking for the record of visitors to that office since 2009 is the “action in question”.

It observed that even if this information is required for investigating an alleged Rs.7 billion scam, the request should have been routed through the narcotics control ministry.

“But the ANF - with military officers on board - has also picked a bone with the ministry to which it is accountable. This conduct may be based on the disdain military officers have historically shown for civilian authorities, but it has no basis in law in a democratic setup,” the daily noted.

Stressing that investigation into the scam is important, it said: “...there are limits which should not be crossed”.

“The ANF’s letter to the PM Secretariat appears to be an effort to undermine an elected government.

“Musa Gilani may have curried favour and may have been involved in wrongdoing. Only an impartial investigation can unearth the facts,” it said.

The daily insisted that the “investigation cannot be given a partisan colour and there must be no agenda at work”.


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