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Governments awards plots to SC Judges, Bureaucrats

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PM’s grace bestowed on 16 SC judges

ISLAMABAD: Sixteen judges of the Supreme Court of Pakistan were quietly allotted residential plots worth millions of rupees each in Islamabad’s expensive sectors over the last two years (2008-2010) on the direct orders of the Prime Minister’s Secretariat under a scheme somewhat incredulously called the “Prime Minister’s Assistance Package”.
A list of the names of the beneficiaries, which also includes the name of ad hoc judge Khalilur Rehman Ramday, was recently submitted to the parliamentary Public Accounts Committee (PAC) by the federal ministry of housing. The list tops the agenda of the next PAC meeting.
The plots were allotted by the Federal Government Employees Housing Foundation (FGEHF) after it received official letters containing the names of 16 judges from the PM’s Secretariat.
The subject of these official letters issued by the PM’s Secretariat was the allotment of residential plots under the Prime Minister’s Assistance Package. However, no details have been given regarding what prompted the government to float such a scheme, meant exclusively for the Supreme Court judges.
The names of 16 Supreme Court judges are part of a main list of about 100 judges of both the four provincial high courts as well as Supreme Court of Pakistan now in the possession of the PAC secretariat. The chairman of the PAC, Ch Nisar Ali Khan, who heads the most powerful parliamentary body of the National Assembly, had ordered the housing ministry to provide details of the allotment of plots to judges, journalists, bureaucrats, and politicians from 1996 to date.
Documents exclusively available with The Express Tribune reveal that, apart from the allotment of plots to 16 Supreme Court judges under the Prime Minister’s Assistance Package, 14 judges of the Supreme Court — both sitting and retired – were given two plots each by the government in violation of official policy, which restricts such allotments to only one plot per person, and that too if they do not already have a plot in the capital.
Moreover, the judges of superior courts were allotted plots even though they were not serving in Islamabad – an essential requirement for such allotments. The exception in the updated list of judges’ who have been allotted plots, is the name of the honourable Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry, who has not been allotted any plots in Islamabad. Otherwise, a quick look at official files now sent to the PAC reveals that almost all judges who served in the higher judiciary were given plots.
The first-ever list of plots given to judges, politicians, journalists and bureaucrats has been compiled after Ch Nisar Ali Khan had issued instructions to submit the names those who were given plots as a part of government policy. The Express Tribune will also publish the list of remaining beneficiaries of the government’s allotment policy.
LHC Chief Justice Khwaja Sharif also accepted a plot in Islamabad although he was serving in Lahore. Justice Khalilur Rehman Ramday, who retired on January 12 and was given a new contract, however took two plots from the government. The newly-appointed chairman of the NAB Justice Deedar Hussain Shah also got a plot in 2004 when he was a judge of the SC. Attorney General Moulvi Anwarul Haq also got a plot as a judge.

PM?s grace bestowed on 16 SC judges – The Express Tribune


The following is the list of judges who have been allotted plots since 1996 to date.
Former Chief Justice Abdul Hameed Dogar, Justice Nawaz Abbasi, Justice Faqik Khokar, Justice Jawaid Butter, Justice Saeed Asad, Justice Sardar Raza Khan, Justice Mian Shakirullah Jaan, Justice Tasaddiq Hussain Jillani, Justice Khalid Paul Khawaja, justice Rana Mohammad Arshad Khan, Justice Shahida Khursheed, Justice Rao Naeem Hashim Khan, Saba Mohuiddin Khan ( district and session juduge), Justice Deedar Hussain Shah, Justice Sheikh Abdul Manan, Justice Zafar Pasha Ch. Justice Saeed Rehman Faruukh, Justice Syed Ahmed Rabbani, Justice Abdul Shakoor Parach, Justice Mohammad Ashraf, Justice Nasim Sikandar, Justice Mohammad Roshan Easani, Justice M Bilal Khan, Justice Mansoor Ahmed, Justice Syed Zahid Hussain, Justice Mohammad Ghani, Justice Shah Jhanan Khan, Justice Zafar Yasin, Justice Nasirul Mulk, Justice Pervez Ahmed, Justice Sarmad Jalal Usmani, Justice M Naeemullah Khan, Justice Mohamamd Khalid Alvi, Justice Qazi Ehsanullah Qureshi, Justice Ejaz Ahmed Ch. Justice Bashir Mujhhid, Justice Ch. Ejaz Yousuf ( CJ Federal Shariat court), Justice Malik Ahmed Saeed, Justice Akhtar Zaman Mulghani, Justice Farrukh Latif, Justice Talat Qayyum Qureshi, Justice Tanveer Bashir Ansari, Justice Mian Mohmmad Najum Zaman, Justice Rustum Ali Malik, Justice Doost Mohammad Khan, Justice Syed Jamshid Ali, Justice Ahmed Khan Lashari, Justice Saqib Nisar, Justice Aslam Jaffri, Justice Amanullah Khan, Justice Asif Saeed Khan Khosa, Justice Shahzad Akbar Khan, Justice Shah Abdur Rashid, Justice Mohammad Sadiq Leghari, Justice Mohammad Akram Baito, Justice Mujeeaullah Siddiqu, Justice Fazalur Rehman Khan, Justice Mohammad Akhtar Shabir, Justice Syed Zawar Hussain Jaffri, Justice Ch. Ejaz Ahmed, Justice Mohammad Saeed Akthar, Justice Syed Manzoor Gilani, Justice Farrukh Mahmood, Justice M Muzamil Khan, Justice Ali Nawaz Chohan, Justice Mohammad Akthar Shahid Siddiqi, Justice Mohammad Sair Ali, Justice Mian Hamid Farooq, Justice Sardar Mohammad Aslam, Justice Sheikh Hakim Ali, Justice Syed Sakhi Hussain Bokhari, Justice Tariq Pervez, Justice Khwaja Mohammad Shairf, Justice Moulvi Anwarul Haq ( currently AG), Justice Zia Pervez, Justice Mushtaq Hussain, Justice Baqir Ali Rana, Justice Syed Akhlaq Ahmed, Justice Mahboob Qadir, Mukhtar Gondal, civil juge and Haji Ahmed. Justice Dilawar Mahmood, Justice Abdul Karim Khan Kundi (PHC), Justice Mian Ghulam Ahmed ( LHC), Justice Agha Saifuddin Khan ( SHC), Justice Kazi Hameeduin (PHC), Justice Arif Iqbal Bhatti ( LHC), Justice Syed Ibne Ali ( PHC), Justice Mohammad Aqil Mirza ( LHC), Justice Sheikh Mohammad Zubair ( LHC), Justice Abdul Hafeez Cheema (LHC), Justice Sharif Hussain Bokhari (LHC), Justice Abdul Rehman Khan (LHC), Justice Mohammad Islam Bhatti (LHC), Justice Kamal Mansoor Alam (SHC), Justice Sajjad Ahmed Sipra (LHC), Justice Mahboob Ali Khan (Peshawar High Court), Justice Ali Mohammad Baloch (SHC), Justice Qazi Mohammad Farooq (PHC), Justice (r) Mohammad Nasim (LHC), Justice Munir A Sheikh (LHC), Justice Fida Mohammad Khan (Federal Sharaiat Court), Justice Tanveer Ahmed Khan (LHC), Justrice Amir Alim Khan (LHC), Justice Ehsanul Haq Ch (LHC), Justice Nazim Hussain Siddiqi (LHC), Justice Mian Nazir Akthar (LHC), Justice Ahmed Ali Mirza (SHC), Justice Raja Mohammad Sabir (LHC), Justice Karamat Nazir Bhandari (LHC), Justice Rashid Aziz Khan (LHC), Munwar Ahmed Mirza (BHC), Justice Bhagwandas (SHC). Justice Mohammad Nawaz Marri (BHC), Justice Nawaz Khan Gandapur (PHC), Nawaz Abbasi (LHC), Justice Falaksher (LHC), Justice Khailur Rehman Ramday of LHC (Justice Ramday took two plots. The second he was allotted in his name hardly two months before his retirement on November 19, 2009), Justice Malik Qayyum (LHC). Justice Sardar Mohammad Raza (PHC), Justice Amir Mulk Mengal (BHC), Justice Iftikar Hussain Chaudhary (LHC), Justice Mohamamd Khursheed Khan ( chief court Northern area), and Justice Mohammad Khial Ombudsman office, also got plots at Islamabad.

http://tribune.com.pk/story/68256/list-of-judges-allotted-plots-since-1996/



It pays to be a bureaucrat in Pakistan


ISLAMABAD: The parliamentary watch-dog of the government, the Public Accounts Committee (PAC), is in possession of a list of 450 members of the bureaucracy who have benefitted from the riches on offer via the plot allotment policy promoted by successive prime ministers.
These plots, given to top bureaucrats, were mostly allotted in the most expensive I-8 sector, where one plot is worth over Rs40million in the open market. The list also contains the names of non-bureaucrats, who were probably friends or relatives of past prime ministers.
However, this list, submitted by the housing ministry, does not directly name the prime ministers who made the allotments in up-market residential localities to their preferred civil servants. Sources privy to the intrigues of the capital said that it is only after incumbent prime ministers use their discretionary powers to dish out a round of plots among senior civil servants do they start getting the bureaucrats’ cooperation in governance.
The official documents tabled before the PAC and exclusively available with The Express Tribune reveal that former prime ministers allotted plots in I-8, E-12 and D-12 sectors.
The exclusive and so far secret list of these beneficiaries of past prime ministers’ discretionary powers, were sought by the chairman PAC Ch. Nisar Ali Khan in one of the recent meetings at Islamabad.
However, the ministry of housing and works has not shared full details with the PAC.
Sources said that, without identifying the chief executives of the country that had misused their discretionary powers, this whole exercise, undertaken on the orders of the PAC, would amount to nothing.
One official source said that the list has been made ambiguous by withholding a number of important facts in order to hide the real motives behind the allotments to civil servants by past prime ministers.
In the list, the ministry of housing and works has only given the subject “list of applicants to whom plots were allotted – special allocation.” No further details have been given about these ‘special allocations’ and how they were made.
Some of the big names of the past who benefitted from such allotments were: A Rehman Malik, Javed Masood, Shaukat Hussain, Zaheeurdin Babar, Mumtaz Ahmad, Masood Sahrif (former IB chief), Rabia Noor, Shaukat Ali Sheikh, Zafar Ali Hilali (former ambassador), Javed Hassan Aly (civil servant), Abdul Rauf Ch, Ahmed Masood Chaudhri, Abdul Waheed Qazi, Riaz Hussain Qureshi (former PPP MNA from Multan), Aslam Shami, S K Mehmood, Aslam Shami, Manzoor Memon, Aslam Hayat Qureshi (former Chief Secretary Punjab), Mirza Qaswar Saeed (former DG Public Relations Farooq Leghari), Zaheer Khan, Syed Mohib Asad (former DG FIA), Javed Akthar Sheikh, Sardar Anwar Ahmed Khan, Ashfaq Mahmood, Ghazanfar Ali Khan, Mutawakil Qazi, Shauja Shah, Zafar Hussain Mirza ( judge), Shamsher Ali Khan (former principal secretary to President Farooq Leghari), Mohammad Shoaib Suddle (former IG Karachi), Khawaja Mohammad Hamid, Syed Anwar Mahmood, Javed Masood, Ashiq Hussain Qureshi, Nek Mohammad, Zulfikar Ali Khan (major general) and others.
The list of higher judiciary judges who were given plots in the past and even during the present government on the orders of Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani as a part of an ‘Assistance Package’ was carried by The Express Tribune on Wednesday.

http://tribune.com.pk/story/68744/it-pays-to-be-a-bureaucrat-in-pakistan/
 
thos epeople were already rich and yet they get these rewards which should have given to those who dont have shelter and poor richer is getting richer and poorer is get more poor this is the policy of govt so shame govt is made to treat everyone same and help those who need most not those who already have more and yet given more
 
It was suppose to be government awards plots to judges, bureaucrats. Maybe someone can edit the title?
 
People go on and on about land reforms but no one talks about the shameless manner in which land is being distributed among the privileged classes.

Someone needs to do an audit of the lands distributed among judges, generals, journalists and bureaucrats but now that it is clear that the judges are involved, it seems that this plunder will continue

Also its interesting to note that the PAC didn't ask for the records of plots awarded to military officers.
 
shame to see that poor people are still without shelters and who already have good jobs more plts bunglows and yet get more plots so shame
 
O fk how many more lands and plots will be distributed.
 
Journalists join the party....

List of journalists given plots in Islamabad


The Public Accounts Committee (PAC) is in possession of a list of 172 journalists who were given plots in the federal capital in line with their two per cent quota in G-13 and G-14 sectors. The names of journalists who were given plots against payments were:
Sarwar Munir Rao
Sohail Iqbal
Ayesha Haroon
Syed Fahd Hussain
Shakeel Ahmed Turabi
M Najeeb
Sarmad Salik
Sheikh Zamir Ahmed Qadri
Rana Qaiser
Absar Alam (he later returned the plot)
Hanif Sabir
Muhammad Malick
Nazir Naji
Shoaib Bhutta
Mustansar Javed
Kh Sharif Ahmed
Sami H Zubari
Aslam Javed
M. Ziauddin
Zafar Rashid
Muhammad Ilyas Bhatti
Noor Faizi
Khan Zaman Malik
Shaukat Ali
Syed M Qasim
Tahir Khan
Ikram Hoti
Syed Qamar Abbas
Shamim Sherrei Sardar
Shakil Sheikh
Abdul Aziz Muhammad
Abrar Ali Saeed
Syed Farhan Bokhari
Muhammad Ashraf
Muhammad Ishaq
Ch. Muhammad Ilyas
Rashida Begum Butt
Iftikhar Nazar
Muhammad Sarwar Awan
Muhammad Afzal Nadeem
Aqeel Ahmed
Ejaz Malik
Muhammad Fayyaz
Altaf Hussain Bhatti
Muhammad Ehsan Elahi
Ali Raza
Shahid Mahmood Malik
Zafar Malik
Wajih Siddiqi
Farman Ali
Muhammad Bilal
Arif Rana
Syed Itrat Hussain
Rana Ghulam Qadir
Saleem Khilji
Abdul Saleem
Safdar Hussain
Imran Nallam Ahmed
Abdur Rauf
Masood Majid Syed
Zahid Khawaja
Muhammad Akram
Syed Zargoon Shah
Kunwar Rashid Habib
Anis Ahmed
Waseem Akthar
Rao Khalid
Abdul Manan Haid
Jehangir Raja
Shaukat Rehman Malik
Muhammad Javed Akhtar
Akthar Munir
Muhammad Javed
Muhammad Nawal
Nasir Chishti
Malik Safdar
Abrar Mustafa
Muhammad Latif
Suleman Hidyat
Murad Shaz Khattack
Attaur Rehman Tahir
Maqsood Mehdi
Muhammad Jamil Khan
Kh Javed Bhatti
Kaleem Ahsan Shah
Khadim Husain
Muhammad Javed Iqbal Khakwani
Mazhar Ali Khan
Syed Qasir Sherazi
Karim Madad
Ghulam Hussain
Zia Shahid
Azam Ahmed Khan
Khalid Awan
Khalid Mahmood
Tanveer Shahzad
Seema Mir
Najumul Islam Usmani
Khalid Mustafa
Saleem Usmani
Syed Ali Nasir Jaffiri
Shahid Butt
Zulfikar Ghuman
Abdul Razak
Ali Imran
Syed Raza Shah
Muhammad Aslam
Shabir Khamid Bukhtawari
Shagufta Jabeen
Bashir Ahmed Shad
Syed Aswad Ulfat
Agha Mahrooz Haider
Nasir Iqbal
Masood Abdul Raheem
Raja Mahmood Bashir Usmani
Muhammad Ilyas Khan
Muhammad Mushtaq Ghuman
Mashkoor Hussain Shah
M Taimur
Masroor Mohsin Gilani
M Ibrahim Khan
M Shahbaz Khan
Amir Sajjad
Mumtaz Alvi
Azhar Jamal
Shakil Awan
Tanveer Alam
Habibur Rehman
Naveed Akram
Syed Azhar Hussain
Mubashir Raza
Arif Hussain
Jabbar Zakriya
Muhammad Farooq Khan
Rahat Naseem
Saeed Murad
Ali Imran Javed
Ejaz Khan
Munir Aziz
Muhammad Riyaz Akhtar
Rahat Munir
Jahanzeb
Muhamamd Afzal Malik
Afzal Nadeem
Muhammad Jameel Mirza
Abdul Mateen Khan
Hamidur Rehman
Saadat Bashir
Akhtar Ali Khan
Abdul Jabbar Khan
Khalid Mahmood
Muhammad Rizwan Khan
Rafiq Hussain Khan
Malik Muhammad Ilyas
Sohail Nashir
Uzair Khan
Zahid Hussain Hashwani
Four journalists Rauf Klasra, Amir Mateen, Khaleeq Kiani and Javed Ch were given plots in light of the Lahore High Court decision of 2006 in their favour after their names were deleted from the final list on the orders of the then prime minister Shaukat Aziz.
The list also contains the names of PTV employees who were given plots. They include Nazir Tabsum, Qamar Mohiuddin, Nisar Baloch, Syed Javed Ali, Khalid Iqbal Warriach, Syed Zulfiqar Ali Shah, Ayub Minhas, Asmatullah Khan Niazi, Muzamil Ahmed Khan, Majeed Afzal Khan (Sajan Khan), Awaid Butt, Rashid Baig, Ramzan Khalid, Muhammad Arshad Saleem, Muhammad Zakariya, Musadiq Kaleem, Arif Mahmood.
 
PM, ex-secretary differ over allottedplots issue
By Ahmad Noorani

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani denied on Tuesday that any plot had been given by him to his friends as reported in The News.

The premier personally made the statement and then asked the Housing Ministry to issue a formal denial, which was done.

A spokesman for the Housing Ministry, while clarifying the news item, said the ministry allotted plots to various categories of different segments of society including civil servants, disabled and in hardship cases in accordance with approved quota and as per well established and pronounced criteria mentioned in the brochure of the respective schemes. The spokesman said allotments had been made by the Housing Ministry as per laid down procedure and criteria.

Prime Minister Gilani did not make any recommendation to the ministry for the allotment of a plot to any individual against any scheme of the Federal Government Employees Housing Foundation. “It is regrettable that the news item is based on incorrect information,” the spokesman concluded.

The mystery deepened when the then information secretary Ashfaq Gondal revealed he was directed by the government to approve plots for the persons.

“Being a secretary information, neither I had any interest nor was otherwise inclined to do so. But I was directed by the government to approve the allotments,” Gondal, who is living a retired life in Islamabad, said while talking to The News.

Sources confirmed it was the Prime Minister’s Secretariat under Yusuf Raza Gilani that asked the then information secretary to favour the influential persons having close ties with either the prime minister or the president.

The statement of the former information secretary came after the prime minister responded to a The News and Jang report during a press talk on Tuesday. Talking to journalists, Prime Minister Gilani saidhe did not order the Housing Ministry to allot plots to any of his friends and had also directed the ministry to issue a clarification in this regard.

Though Prime Minister Gilani issued directions to the Housing Ministry, this matter pertains to the Information Ministry. When this reporter contacted Housing Secretary Raja Muhammad Abbas on Tuesday after Gilani’s statement, he confirmed the seven allotments were made on recommendation of the Information Ministry. “In these allotments, the Housing Ministry is bound to follow the recommendations of the Information Ministry and did not see any rules or regulations,” Abbas said.

Housing Ministry sources told The News that the policy and rules to allot plots was devised collectively by the Information Ministry, Housing Ministry and representative bodies concerned. According to the rules, for the allotment of plots in Islamabad, seniority lists in each category of plot were prepared on the basis of age/date of birth, giving priority to senior professionals.

A former top official confirmed the lists were prepared in accordance with the devised policy of age-based seniority and available plots were allotted while a waiting seniority list was issued by his ministry which was meant to allot any newly created plots in future in line with policy and following the rules and regulations according to this list.

However, what happened on orders of Prime Minister Gilani was entirely different. The Federal Government Employees Housing Foundation (FGEHF), an attached department of Housing Ministry, made the first allotment on January 19, 2009 to a close friend of Prime Minister Gilani who was on position 29 on the waiting list having date of birth October 19, 1972.

The news of this illegal allotment was unearthed by The News on February 6, 2009 and subsequently three other persons falling in the same waiting list were allotted plots to cover the first allotment. Even these three persons were not on the top of the waiting list but had seniority numbers 14, 20 and 25.

It was argued that these persons had moved a petition in the Lahore High Court (LHC) and they were allotted plots in accordance with the LHC order. However the LHC never issued any order to allot plots to anybody and five petitions were disposed of with no order. The five petitions were moved by 20 persons while allotment was made to only four influential persons. After the four allotments, many other influential persons jumped into the fray and even three more persons got luxurious plots in Islamabad.

Among these three persons, one is a close friend of President Asif Ali Zardari and besides this plot he was also illegally allotted a government house in sector G-6 of Islamabad.

One of the three persons belongs to Lahore while Rule-4 of the basic rules advertised in newspapers reads: “He/she must be based in Islamabad/ Rawalpindi”. This person from Lahore is also known for his closeness with President Zardari. However, the third person was close to General Pervez Musharraf and had also got countless benefits during Musharraf’s long dictatorial regime.

After finding these and many other irregularities the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) had ordered the Housing Ministry to provide complete lists of allotments made to judges, journalists, bureaucrats and politicians from 1996 onward. These lists have not yet reached the PAC and according to credible sources PAC will soon take the issue and will probe the illegal allotments especially to the seven influential persons.
 
i uderstand teh reason y the floods came god is getting us right back after these shamefull things and ppl still dont learn -_-
 

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