Pakistan to sign deals with UAE, China to tackle money laundering

In this file photo, Passersby walk past an advertisement board with photos of Pakistani rupee at a money exchange along a sidewalk in Karachi, Pakistan on June 11, 2018. (REUTERS)
Updated 14 October 2018
Follow

Pakistan to sign deals with UAE, China to tackle money laundering

  • About $10 billion are laundered annually from Pakistan, claimed special assistant to PM on accountability
  • A Pakistani delegation will visit UK next week to seek support of the National Crime Agency to combat money laundering from Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Sunday said it will sign separate agreements with the UAE and China to tackle money laundering and enable joint investigations.

“We are going to sign agreements with the UAE and China to get access to information (on money laundering) and ensure joint investigations,” said Mirza Shahzad Akbar, special assistant on accountability to Pakistan’s prime minister.
“The agreements will help us deal with all those people who have devised different ways to launder money.”
According to the US State Department, up to $10 billion are laundered annually from Pakistan, said Akbar.
“Currently, we are working on hundreds of cases of money laundering and corruption,” he added. “Our economy has nosedived due to this problem.”
Akbar said he will go to London next week to meet with his counterpart at the National Crime Agency (NCA).
“We have signed an agreement with the UK and sought fresh details from the NCA to probe all cases related to money laundering,” he said. “I am taking a list of cases with me to discuss with the NCA.”
Previous Pakistani governments had failed to devise a system to tackle money laundering, Akbar added. 
Pakistani authorities had recently found fake bank accounts containing millions of rupees, he said.
“Why were these accounts not traced previously,” he asked, blaming politicians who had not allowed state institutions to function properly.
“Now our institutions enjoy moral and political support from the government, and are working as a team to check such crimes,” he said. “We are restoring the system.”
The government has appointed a “highly qualified” person as director general of the Financial Monitoring Unit at the State Bank of Pakistan to “automate the system of tracing fictitious bank accounts and transactions,” Akbar added.
“We have developed an interagency system to check such crimes. Pakistan has not filed even a single case (of asset recovery) abroad in the last 10 to 15 years,” he said. 
“We did not sign any memorandums of understanding or agreements with other countries for this purpose.”


Pakistan orders four-day workweek, shuts schools to save fuel amid Middle East oil crisis

Updated 09 March 2026
Follow

Pakistan orders four-day workweek, shuts schools to save fuel amid Middle East oil crisis

  • The development comes as ongoing US-Israeli strikes on Iran disrupt oil supplies in Strait of Hormuz, push prices past $119 a barrel
  • Islamabad bans government purchases, cuts fuel allocation for vehicles as well as workforce in public and private offices by 50 percent

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Monday announced austerity measures, including a four-day work week, cuts in government expenditures and closure of schools, to offset the impact of rising global oil prices due to an ongoing conflict in the Middle East.

Global fuel supply lines have been disrupted in the Strait of Hormuz, which supplies nearly a fourth of world oil consumption, after Tehran blocked it following United States-Israeli strikes on Iran and counterattacks against US interests in the Gulf region.

Oil prices surged more than 25 percent globally on Monday to $119.50 a barrel, the highest levels since mid-2022, as some major producers cut supplies and fears of prolonged shipping disruptions gripped the market due to the expanding US-Israeli war with Iran.

In his televised address on Sunday night, Sharif said global oil prices were expected to rise again in the coming days but vowed not to let the people bear their brunt, announcing austerity measures to lessen the impact of fuel price hikes.

“Fifty percent staff in public and private entities will work from home,” he announced, adding this would not be applicable to essential services. “Offices will remain open for four days a week. One-day additional off is being given to conserve oil, but it would not be applicable to banks.”

Sharif didn’t specify working days of the week and the government was likely to issue a notification in this regard.

He said a decrease of 50 percent was being made in fuel allocation for government vehicles immediately for the next two months, but they would not include ambulances and public buses.

“Cabinet members, advisers and special assistants will not draw salaries for the next two months, 25 percent salaries of parliamentarians are being deducted, two-day salaries of Grade 20 and above officers, or those who are paid Rs300,000 ($1,067) a month, are being deducted for public relief,” he said.

Similarly, there will be 20 percent reduction in public department expenses and a complete ban on the purchase of cars, furniture, air conditioners and other goods, according to the prime minister.

Foreign trips of ministers and other government officials will also be banned along with government dinners and iftar buffets, while teleconferences and online meetings will be given priority.

“All schools will be off for two weeks, starting from the end of this week, and all higher education institutions should immediately begin online classes,” he said.

Sharif’s comments were aired hours after Pakistani authorities said the country had “comfortable levels” of petroleum stocks and the supply chains were functioning smoothly, despite intensifying Middle East conflict.

Petroleum Minister Ali Pervaiz Malik said three oil shipments were due to reach Pakistan this week, state media reported.

Meanwhile, Pakistan Navy (PN) launched ‘Operation Muhafiz-ul-Bahr’ to safeguard national energy shipments, the Pakistani military said on Monday, amid disruptions to critical sea lanes due to the conflict.

The navy is conducting escort operations in close coordination with the Pakistan National Shipping Corporation (PNSC), according to the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the military’s media wing. It is fully cognizant of the prevailing maritime situation and is actively monitoring and controlling the movement of merchant vessels to ensure their safe and secure transit.

“With approximately 90 percent of Pakistan’s trade conducted via sea, the operation aims to ensure that vital sea routes remain safe, secure, and uninterrupted,” the ISPR said on Monday. “Currently, PN ships are escorting 2 x Merchant Vessels, one of which is scheduled to arrive Karachi today.”