Pakistan

Seize illegal funding if found; party cannot be dissolved: PTI lawyer tells ECP

PTI lawyer says overseas Pakistanis sending funds to country can't be termed "foreign funding"; hearing adjourned till tomorrow

Nausheen Yusuf
May 10, 2022
The board outside the premises of the Election Commission of Pakistan. — ECP website/File
The board outside the premises of the Election Commission of Pakistan. — ECP website/File


ISLAMABAD: PTI lawyer Anwar Mansoor said Tuesday if the party has accumulated funding through illegal means then it should be seized, but rejected the notion of the party being dissolved.

Mansoor made the statement during the PTI's foreign funding case at the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP), which was being heard by a three-member bench headed by Chief Election Commissioner Sikandar Sultan Raja.

Mansoor, presenting his arguments in response to the ECP's scrutiny committee report, asked whether the funds sent by an overseas Pakistani could be termed "foreign funding".

"If we need a decision on whether foreign funding is not in the interest of the country, then the Supreme Court will rule on it [...] your job is not to look at foreign funding but to analyse whether the funds were illegal. You cannot go further than that," the lawyer told the ECP bench.

At this, the chief election commissioner agreed that the ECP's job was to identify illegal funding and told the PTI lawyer that the body had upgraded its finance wing.

The lawyer contended that a "false narrative" was being created that the PTI was running on foreign funds. "Several political parties have not shown their funding but they are openly holding rallies," he said, without specifying any party.

Mansoor further said that if a Pakistani residing abroad sends funds to the PTI, it would not fall under the category of foreign funding and also informed the bench that an LLC was funding for the PTI but it was not illegal as the party was not paying it for the task.

After the PTI lawyer wrapped up the arguments, the CEC adjourned the hearing till 10:30am tomorrow.


Advertisement