ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court turned down  on Thursday a request by the Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF) for withdrawal  of a case against the import of a proscribed chemical — a scandal that allegedly involves the prime minister’s younger son, Ali Musa Gilani.
Musa Gilani was recently elected member  of National Assembly from Multan on a seat vacated by former foreign  minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi after joining the Pakistan  Tehrik-i-Insaaf.
Earlier, the name of the prime minister’s elder son, Abdul Qadir Gilani, had surfaced in the 2010 Haj corruption case.
A three-judge bench, comprising Chief  Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry, Justice Khilji Arif Hussain and  Justice Tariq Parvez, had taken up a petition moved by the regional  director of ANF Islamabad.
The court ordered the ANF to submit an  investigation report on out-of-turn quota for import of the raw material  granted to two pharmaceutical companies by the federal health ministry  allegedly under the influence of Musa Gilani.
The ANF Commander, Brig Faheem, informed  the court that a quota of 9,000kg, instead of 1,000kg, had been granted  to Berlex Labs International and Denis Pharmaceutical.
Commonly known as poor man’s cocaine,  the chemical is also used to manufacture a medicine called ‘Ephedrine’  to cure common cold, flu and asthma.
Advocate Raja Shahid Mehmood Abbasi,  representing the ANF, submitted before the court that Brig Faheem  intended to withdraw the petition.
“Who gave you the authority to withdraw  the case and under what reasons you have decided to withdraw it;  something is wrong,” the chief justice suspected.
“Are you scared when you should be setting an example,” the chief justice said.
Brig Faheem said he was not scared and  added that the name of Tauqir Ahmed Khan had surfaced during  investigations. The man said he was personal secretary to Musa Gilani  and got the quota approved by the health ministry against rules and  regulations.
Brig Faheem read out a report of an  inquiry committee which determined that the two pharmaceutical companies  had misused the quota and allegedly sold it to smugglers, instead of  using it for the medicine.
“The situation is bringing a bad name  for the country as such things are happening at the official level,” the  chief justice regretted.
The report said every pharmaceutical company was entitled to a quota of 500kg of the ingredient used to make Ephedrine  tablet, but the health ministry had doled out a quota of 9,000kg to  Berlex Labs and Denis Pharmaceutical while ignoring 20 other  pharmaceutical companies.
The issue was raised in the National  Assembly in 2009 and former health minister Makdoom Shahabuddin had set  up a fact-finding committee.
The ANF’s investigation officer informed  the court that he had issued a notice to Musa Gilani on March 12 last  year to join investigation for evidence because Tauqir Khan claimed that  he was private secretary to the prime minister’s son. Neither Musa  Gilani nor Tauqir Khan appeared.
A letter written by Health Secretary  Zafar Abbas to the ANF was also read out. It said evidence against  Tauqir Ali Khan should be brought for prior approval for proceedings.
 
No comments:
Post a Comment