Foreign cases that could haunt Bhutto.

I am sure this is not what BB meant when she wanted foreign investigators? Inshallah, the free judiciary of Pakistan will take care of Ms Bhutto before any foreign courts do :jhanda:

Foreign cases that could haunt Bhutto

By Richard Lawson

BBC News, London

Former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto is preparing for general elections shortly after returning to the country after years of self-imposed exile. She came back after President Pervez Musharraf granted her a controversial amnesty from the charges in Pakistan. The Supreme Court may yet rule that amnesty illegal. But even if it clears it, Ms Bhutto, who has been in talks about a power-sharing deal with President Musharraf, could still face several cases outside of Pakistan.

One of the most advanced is in Switzerland, where in 2003 Geneva magistrate Daniel Devaud convicted Ms Bhutto of money-laundering. In his judgment, he found she and her close associates received around $15m in kickbacks from Pakistani government contracts with SGS and Cotecna, two Swiss companies. Mr Devaud sentenced Ms Bhutto and her husband Asif Zardari to 180 days in prison, ordering them to return $11.9m to the government of Pakistan. “I certainly don’t have any doubts about the judgments I handed down [which] came after an investigation lasting several years, involving thousands of documents,” he has told the BBC. Ms Bhutto contested the decision, which was made in her absence, and the case is being reheard, with the former prime minister now facing the more serious charge of aggravated money-laundering.

Not automatic

Asked about the case, her officials told the BBC: “These allegations are part and parcel of a campaign of a character assassination. Ms Bhutto has not done anything illegal. She and her husband, Senator Asif Zardari, both have defended themselves in every court in every country.” Many in Pakistan assume the Swiss case will now collapse because of the deal struck between Ms Bhutto and President Musharraf. Yet under Swiss law, even if the government of Pakistan stops co-operating, that would not automatically end legal proceedings in Switzerland. Vincent Fournier, the Swiss judge in charge of the current case, told the BBC he planned to hand the case over to Geneva’s attorney-general this week.

A second international case involving Ms Bhutto is under way in England. In this case, the government of Pakistan alleged that Ms Bhutto and her husband bought Rockwood, a $3.4m country estate in Surrey, using money from kickbacks. Ms Bhutto and Mr Zardari denied owning the estate for eight years. But in 2004, Mr Zardari suddenly admitted that it was his. Then, in 2006, an English judge, Lord Justice Collins, came to an interesting, though by no means final, conclusion about the estate.

Saddam Hussein’s government received illegal funds from Petroline FZC, documents say Whilst stressing he was not making any “findings of fact”, Justice Collins said there was a “reasonable prospect” of the government of Pakistan establishing, in possible future court proceedings, that Ms Bhutto and/or her husband bought and refurbished Rockwood with “the fruits of corruption”. Asked by the BBC about Rockwood, Ms Bhutto’s officials denied any allegations of corruption, but gave no detailed response, although her husband’s lawyers told Justice Collins that Pakistan’s case was speculative. The London case is a civil one. That means it could collapse should President Musharraf’s government decide not to pursue it.
Iraq questions

Ms Bhutto also faces allegations concerning the United Nations oil-for-food scandal. Mr Zardari and Ms Bhutto - objects of ‘character assassination’ In 2005, the Independent Inquiry Commission led by former US Federal Reserve head Paul Volcker found that more than 2,000 companies breached UN sanctions by making illegal payments to Saddam Hussein’s government in Iraq before 2003. Among them was a company called Petroline FZC, based in the United Arab Emirates. Mr Volcker’s inquiry found it traded $144m of Iraqi oil, and made $2m of illegal payments to Saddam Hussein’s regime. Documents from Pakistan’s National Accountability Bureau appear to show that Ms Bhutto was Petroline FZC’s chairwoman. If these documents are genuine, and the oil-for-food allegations are proven, this would be especially damaging for the former prime minister. The Spanish authorities are investigating financial transactions thought to be linked to Petroline FZC. In addition, President Musharraf’s amnesty dropping corruption charges against public officials only covers the period 1986-1999. The Petroline FZC transactions came after that, which means that in theory a charge is possible. Ms Bhutto has always denied all corruption allegations, and her supporters say the allegations against her are politically motivated. But her legal difficulties may not be over yet.

Re: Foreign cases that could haunt Bhutto.

Let us pray for justice and hope she is at least convicted in Switzerland b/c I doubt if she will ever face justice in Pakistan.

Re: Foreign cases that could haunt Bhutto.

Dont worry Aalsi, she wont hang Musharraf if she comes to power again, at most, she'll put him under house arrest.. Fiqar not lalley...

Re: Foreign cases that could haunt Bhutto.

Phew..thank god for that. I really was worried. :hehe:

Re: Foreign cases that could haunt Bhutto.

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/10/29/europe/EU-GEN-Switzerland-Pakistan-Corruption.php#Scene_1

Swiss prosecutor gets case against Bhutto

GENEVA: A key prosecutor said he received the conclusions of a money laundering investigation against former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto on Monday, but it was unclear whether there would be any further legal action against her in Switzerland. “The investigating magistrate has sent me the file,” Daniel Zappelli, chief prosecutor of the canton (state) of Geneva, told The Associated Press. The prosecutor can now decide whether to file charges, suspend the proceedings or drop the case. Since 2004, the magistrate had been conducting the investigation into allegations that Bhutto had used Swiss banks to launder millions of dollars in kickbacks.

Bhutto returned to Pakistan on Oct. 18 after eight years of exile to contest parliamentary elections set for January, hoping to win a third premiership. Negotiations with President Gen. Pervez Musharraf, a longtime political rival, have resulted in an amnesty for Bhutto covering the corruption charges that made her leave Pakistan and could lead to a power-sharing agreement. Pakistan’s Supreme Court is examining the legality of the amnesty. Swiss lawyers are closely following the developments in Pakistan and there has been speculation in the Swiss media whether they might wait to see what Pakistan’s highest court will decide.

Another Geneva magistrate convicted Bhutto and her husband, Asif Ali Zardari, in absentia of money laundering in July 2003 under a Swiss law that empowers high-level investigators to impose penalties without a court hearing. They received six-month suspended sentences and were ordered to pay US$11 million (€9.1 million) to the Pakistani government, but the conviction was automatically thrown out when the pair contested it. They were then charged by another Swiss magistrate, Vincent Fournier, in July 2004 and the case was reopened. Bhutto insisted that the corruption cases against her, including the one in Switzerland, were politically motivated and said she believes the Pakistan high court would let the amnesty stand. Her lawyer in Geneva, Alec Reymond, said Monday he has not yet received notification that the file has been handed over to Zappelli. But he said the amnesty granted to Bhutto in her home country would play a decisive role in the Swiss proceedings.

If Pakistan’s Supreme Court confirms the amnesty “it will necessarily be of a very high importance,” Reymond told the AP. The alleged money laundering in Switzerland stems from alleged crimes in Pakistan, he added. “If there is no crime, there is no money laundering.” Swiss authorities said in 1998 they found about 20 million Swiss francs (then US$13.8 million) in Swiss accounts belonging to Bhutto and her family. The accounts were frozen at the request of Pakistan. Bhutto has said she has no connection with the accounts. Swiss and Pakistani investigators allege much of the money came from Societe Generale de Surveillance, or SGS, one of the world’s largest customs inspection companies, in exchange for business with the Pakistani government when Bhutto was in power. SGS has consistently denied the claims. Bhutto was twice prime minister of Pakistan — she was the first female premier in the Muslim world — but her governments collapsed in 1990 and 1996 over corruption allegations.

Re: Foreign cases that could haunt Bhutto.

Isnt it a shame that mr "Let me keep my kursi at all costs" who initiated these cases is now busy withdrawing them in order to suck up to BB so that he can keep his kursi. How low can one get. This guy beats everyone. As i said before he would sell Pakistan if that is what will take to keep him in power.

Re: Foreign cases that could haunt Bhutto.

Yes apparently BB wants kursi but Mush wants to keep both wardi and kursi!

Some meeting between Mush and BB