Mystery surrounds movements of Italy’s Tunisia Bardo suspect

Updated 21 May 2015
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Mystery surrounds movements of Italy’s Tunisia Bardo suspect

ROME: Italy’s interior minister is defending its handling of a suspect in Tunisia’s Bardo museum massacre amid questions about his movements after he arrived in Italy with a boat full of rescued migrants.
The mystery surrounding Abdelmajid Touil intensified Thursday, with authorities saying it appeared he was in Italy in the days before and after the attack.
Touil was arrested on Tuesday on a Tunisian arrest warrant at the home of his mother in Gaggiano, near Milan, on accusations that he helped plan and execute the March 18 Bardo massacre, which killed 22 people.
Interior Minister Angelino Alfano insisted to Parliament that there were no terrorism-related concerns about Touil when he arrived Feb. 17. As is routine for newly arrived migrants, Touil was fingerprinted, which then helped police positively identify him.


Pakistan anti-graft body says in talks with UAE to curb money laundering, illegal assets holding

Updated 7 sec ago
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Pakistan anti-graft body says in talks with UAE to curb money laundering, illegal assets holding

  • Many Pakistanis reportedly own luxury homes and commercial properties in the UAE despite not working or having any businesses in Gulf country
  • A team of Pakistan’s National Accountability Bureau will soon visit Dubai to sign an MoU with Emirati authorities for cooperation against corruption

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s National Accountability Bureau (NAB) said on Tuesday it was in talks with its counterparts in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to curb money laundering and illegal offshore asset holdings through mutual legal assistance.

Pakistan has a large diaspora in the UAE, who are a major source of foreign remittances to the South Asian country, while many Pakistanis reportedly own luxury homes and commercial properties despite not working or having any businesses in the Gulf nation.

In 2018, the Supreme Court of Pakistan was presented a report, compiled by chartered accountancy firm A.F. Ferguson, that stated that Pakistani nationals owned properties and assets worth $150 billion in the UAE, in a case relating to illegal offshore assets.

Speaking at a press conference on Tuesday, senior NAB officials said they have recently signed multiple mutual legal assistance agreements with foreign governments as they announced a record recovery of Rs6.213 trillion ($22 billion) ill-gotten money in 2025.

“A team of NAB officials will travel to Dubai in the coming weeks to sign an MoU with the UAE Accountability Authority (UAEAA) for joint cooperation against corruption,” NAB’s Director General (Operations) Amjad Majeed Aulakh said, adding that both sides have already held several rounds of talks to finalize the agreement.

Asked if Pakistan planned to crack down on individuals who purchased assets in the UAE using illicit funds, Aulakh said the anti-corruption watchdog was already tracing and repatriating assets stashed abroad via INTERPOL, the Global Operational Network of Law Enforcement Agencies (GlobE), and the Asset Recovery Interagency Network – Asia Pacific (ARIN-AP).

The Bureau’s total recoveries reached Rs11.524 trillion ($41 billion) over the past three years, with 2025 alone accounting for more than half of that amount, according to NAB Deputy Chairman Sohail Nasir. These recoveries included around 2.98 million acres of encroached state and forest land.

The watchdog is also strengthening its capacity to handle sophisticated financial crimes, including the use of cryptocurrency to evade monitoring, officials said.

“We are working on enhancing our capacity,” Aulakh said. “However, those using crypto for money laundering or corruption are eventually caught when they attempt to convert it into movable or immovable assets.”

Such investigations are increasingly supported by artificial intelligence-assisted tools, blockchain analysis and digital forensics, he added.