Dubai Leaks 2024: Pakistan's Elite Launder Billions to Dubai

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When each day millions can't feed themselves in PK, our unelected elite led by an avaricious Junta and their Polishers have laundered billions from a poor country. The "Hafiz" talks morals and religion but his govt has already stolen a cool billion in the Wheat Scandal so don't expect anything from the crook.

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After a six-month investigation led by the Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and the Norwegian outlet E24, reporters from 74 partners in 58 countries uncovered scores of convicted criminals, fugitives, political figures accused of corruption or their associates, and sanctioned individuals who have recently owned at least one piece of real estate in Dubai.

According to the leak of 2022 data assessed by economists and reporters, the number of residential properties owned by foreigners put Indians first, at 35,000 properties and 29,700 owners. The total value of these properties is estimated at $17 billion that same year.

Owners with Pakistani nationality come second among foreigners at 17,000 owners of 23,000 residential properties.

UK citizens in the 2022 sample own 22,000 residential properties and 19,500 owners, valued at $10bn, whereas Saudi nationals are listed with 16,000 properties and 8,500 owners, valued at $8.5 billion.

Dubai’s international appeal

From the 37th floor of Dubai’s tallest skyscraper, the wife of an alleged Bosnian cartel member posted video after video on TikTok of the couple’s sleek rental apartment, often featuring their grey cat.

The images provided just enough clues for reporters to identify the apartment’s precise location in the city’s iconic Burj Khalifa skyscraper — and the fact that it belonged to another target of law enforcement: Candido Nsue Okomo, the former head of Equatorial Guinea’s scandal-plagued national oil company, who is under investigation for money laundering in Spain. Okomo is also the brother-in-law of long-term President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, whose family is accused by French prosecutors of looting the African country’s public resources, which are heavily reliant on oil revenues.

It’s unclear whether the tenant, Dženis Kadrić, and his landlord Okomo knew of each other’s alleged misdeeds. But their convergence in a lease agreement is emblematic of modern-day Dubai, where secrecy and years of permissive policies have left its property rolls riddled with disreputable owners.

In the case of Okomo’s high-rise apartment, reporters from OCCRP’s Serbian partner KRIK first used TikTok videos to link the unit to the Kadrić, a former policeman who was arrested in Bosnia in February on suspicion of participation in organised crime, drug smuggling, and money laundering. He was released in May but remains under investigation.

Geolocation specialists from the investigative outlet Bellingcat then used the videos to identify the specific apartment. Okomo’s ownership was confirmed by a 2023 rental contract and his listing in a tranche of leaked property data.

Not far from Okomo’s Burj Khalifa property is an apartment in the Burj Lake Hotel owned by Shwan Mohammad Almulla, an Iraqi-born British national who was indicted in the US in 2021 over a bribery scheme to obtain millions in reconstruction contracts for Iraq.

Down the coast at the Grandeur Residences, a building on Dubai’s palm-shaped artificial archipelago, is a unit belonging to Joseph Johannes Leijdekkers, a 32-year-old also known as ‘Chubby Jos’ who is on the European Union’s Most Wanted List for alleged narcotics trafficking.

And in the nearby Palm Tower Dubai, sits a flat owned by Danilo Vunjao Santana Gouveia, a Brazilian businessman who goes by Dubaiano. Indicted on charges of money laundering and fraud for allegedly running a massive Bitcoin pyramid scheme in his home country, he has since taken up a career as a musician in Dubai, which he details on an Instagram account alongside photographs of him posing in front of various locations in the city, including the sail-shaped Burj Al Arab Jumeirah skyscraper.

These and numerous other property owners verified by OCCRP and its partners should have immediately raised red flags under any basic risk assessment. Yet none of the individuals were apparently prevented from buying properties in their own names. (Kadrić, Okomo, Almulla, Leijdekkers, and Santana Gouveia did not respond to requests for comment.)

Reporters used the data as a starting point to explore the landscape of foreign property ownership in Dubai. They spent months verifying the identities of the people who appeared in the leaked data, as well as confirming their ownership status, using official records, open-source research, and other leaked datasets.

From Australian cocaine traffickers to the relatives of West African dictators and a coterie of sanctioned Hezbollah financiers, the findings reveal how the city has opened its arms to unscrupulous characters from around the globe.

“Corrupt actors and politically exposed individuals avoiding public accountability use secrecy jurisdictions like the UAE to hide assets in plain sight,” said Maria Giuditta Borselli, a portfolio manager at C4ADS.

UAE officials — including at the ministries of interior, economy, and justice — and Dubai Police did not respond to detailed questions, but the country’s embassies in the UK and Norway sent a brief response to reporters, saying that the country “takes its role in protecting the integrity of the global financial system extremely seriously.”

Today, Dubai is a global financial hub that boasts one of the world’s most recognisable skylines — a futuristic steel jungle where business leaders ink billions of dollars in deals, influencers model an existence draped in luxury, and Tom Cruise scales the world’s tallest building for a blockbuster film franchise.

The Gulf city is far from the only place where criminals and others have successfully stashed their wealth in luxury properties. New York City and London real estate have also been known to attract dirty money.

But experts say Dubai has a lot to offer, and not just in terms of its vast array of high-end skyscrapers and villas.

One pull factor, experts say, has been the emirate’s inconsistent responses to requests from foreign authorities for help arresting and extraditing fugitives.

Until recently, the UAE lacked extradition treaties with many countries, helping turn Dubai into a magnet for fugitives from around the globe. While UAE authorities have increased cooperation with foreign law enforcement in recent years, the government is still known for inconsistent responses to extradition requests.

The India-born Gupta brothers, who are accused of looting South Africa’s public funds through their close links with the country’s former President Jacob Zuma, offer a recent example.

Despite an extradition treaty between the two nations, last year the UAE quietly dismissed South Africa’s request to extradite Atul and Rajesh Gupta, who face charges of money laundering and fraud. The move shocked South Africa, where authorities have said the UAE failed to provide “satisfactory responses” on the reasons behind the rejection.

A UAE official did not reply to specific questions about the Guptas, but said it “works closely with international partners to disrupt and deter all forms of illicit finance.” The Guptas and Zuma did not respond to requests for comment.

When asked about the country’s record on extraditions, Sauod Abdulaziz Almutawa, the head of Dubai Police’s financial crime centre stressed the recent arrests of those with red notices and said that extradition requests, which must pass through local courts, take longer to process and often face challenges from deep-pocketed defence teams.

“We are increasing our capacity, increasing and developing our resources … to meet the expectations of our foreign counterparts,” he added in an interview with Swedish Television (SVT) in March.

 
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The usual suspects on the list- Sharifs and Zardari's but Naqvi the new crook on the block also found to have property that was undeclared at the time of the Senate elections. But with NAB and the courts under mafia control and Qazi being an even bigger crook, don't expect anything to come of this. If any PTI members are on the list then they must explain, even if the NAB and courts don't ask.
 
Lol @ Dawn, India with its economy and ease of buying properties in Dubai have 35k properties, Pakistanis with that economy have 23k properties majority of which are generals and elite still Dawn is trying to spin like India is more corrupt without giving any proper information on Pakistani owners.
 
While 17,000 Pakistani citizens are listed owners in the 2022 leak, academics using the data and additional sources put the actual number of Pakistani owners of residential property in Dubai at 22,000. They further estimate that the apartments and villas may have been worth more than $10 billion at the start of 2022, but with the more than 25 per cent increase in property prices over the last two years, the real worth of Pakistanis’ residential properties in Dubai could now be well above $12.5bn
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OFFICIALS in Pakistan have tried in recent years to unearth details of Pakistani citizens who own assets in Dubai with an aim to bring undeclared assets and income into the tax net. But they have made little headway. Dubai authorities are reluctant to share information about something as simple as the number of Pakistani citizens with Dubai residence visas, commonly known as iqamas or Emirates IDs.

There is also a political element to the stonewalling: Pakistan doesn’t have the geopolitical clout to demand this information. Today, those details — an astounding volume of leaked property data that includes over 23,000 properties listed as belonging to Pakistani nationals up to the spring of 2022 — are at the fingertips of journalists from scores of media outlets around the world.

The leaked data provides a detailed overview of hundreds of thousands of properties in Dubai and information about their ownership or usage, largely from 2020 and 2022. It was obtained by the Center for Advanced Defence Studies (C4ADS), a non-profit organisation based in Washington, D.C., that researches international crime and conflict.

It was then shared with Norwegian financial outlet E24 and the Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), which coordinated an investigative project with media outlets from around the world. Titled ‘Dubai Unlocked’, the collaboration includes 74 partners from 58 countries. Dawn is part of that collaboration.

A mere mention in the data is not evidence in itself of financial crime or tax fraud. Nor does the data contain information such as residence status, sources of income, tax declarations of rental income or capital gains. In fact, several of those approached by Dawn for comment on their properties said they were declared to the tax authorities. But it does paint an astonishing picture of contrasts. Pakistan, a developing country teetering on the edge of economic collapse, begging international lenders and friendly countries for lifelines in single digit billions, features prominently in the data.

While 17,000 Pakistani citizens are listed owners in the 2022 leak, academics using the data and additional sources put the actual number of Pakistani owners of residential property in Dubai at 22,000. They further estimate that the apartments and villas may have been worth more than $10 billion at the start of 2022, but with the more than 25 per cent increase in property prices over the last two years, the real worth of Pakistanis’ residential properties in Dubai could now be well above $12.5bn.

“If we have the data you are talking about, as well as the information on residence status, we will make sure those who are eligible to pay tax in Pakistan on rental income or capital value are doing so,” Malik Amjed Zubair Tiwana, chairman of the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) tells Dawn. “It may be a sensitive matter, and perhaps the law will have to change, but with political will we will go all out against tax evaders. The government is prepared for this.”

He added that “citizenship has no importance in tax law” as taxation is linked to residence status. “We have been trying to get information from the immigration department of Dubai to determine tax status, but it has not materialised.”

Past outreach from Pakistani officials to Dubai’s tax counterparts, too, has delivered little. Both the incumbent FBR chairman and former FBR chairman Shabbar Zaidi tell Dawn the Dubai authorities are not forthcoming about sharing information on iqamas, for instance, despite the existence of a tax treaty between the UAE and Pakistan to avoid double taxation. In 2019, the FBR in a strongly worded handout expressed its frustration at the silence of Dubai authorities on this issue, and threatened to terminate the treaty. And yet, the Dubai authorities remained tight-lipped.

Speaking to Dawn, Mr Zaidi shares a revealing incident from the time he was FBR chairman. “[In December 2019] I asked my director of taxes to get iqama details from Dubai authorities to identify which Pakistanis have Dubai iqamas, because those who own property in Dubai typically have iqamas.” Soon after, he said, he was contacted by a senior diplomat who suggested he should not pursue the matter.

“I told him, ‘I am asking for my own people’s information, what is the problem?’”

Mr Zaidi continues, “He left unhappy and then went to Shah Mahmood Qureshi [then foreign minister]. He complained to Qureshi, and Qureshi rang me. I told him ‘Leave this, it’s my issue not yours’. Then the UAE diplomat went to Imran Khan [then prime minister]. IK called me and asked what I was doing. He said “Haath haula rakho, they just gave us $1bn.” Mr Khan was referring to the $3bn bailout package pledged by the UAE to Pakistan in January 2019.

Mr Zaidi adds, “Because of Pakistan’s bankruptcy and financial dependency on countries like the UAE, it cannot ask for this information. Dubai thrives on non-transparency, and doesn’t want to share this information.”

Tax, blackmail and vanishing files

Ali Rahim, tax lawyer and former Karachi Tax Bar Association president, explains how tax laws apply to Pakistanis with overseas assets. “The entire world income of resident Pakistanis is liable to be taxed in Pakistan, but they can get credit against their total tax payment for any taxes paid abroad.”

Pakistani residents (those in the country for more than 183 days per year) with assets abroad have to value them at the current exchange rate and pay one per cent tax on that if the value of the asset is more than Rs100 million. This law is being challenged in the high courts and the Supreme Court.

Non-resident or overseas Pakistanis are only liable to pay tax on income generated in Pakistan. They are not required to file a wealth statement or declare overseas assets.

Mr Rahim shares a troubling anecdote. “Six or seven years ago, some government officials on a private visit to Dubai obtained details under false pretexts from various developers of properties owned by Pakistanis. They brought back CDs full of information and then began blackmailing those individuals for money.”

He adds. “Legally speaking, the same laws apply to politicians and PEPs (politically exposed persons) as well but we all know the factual position. I know of instances where PEPs’ files have been put on the backburner and their cases have vanished into thin air.”

According to the Atlas of the Offshore World, compiled by the EU Tax Observatory and Norway’s Skatteforsk Cente for Tax Research, offshore financial wealth (equities, bonds, mutual fund shares, and associated bank deposits) owned by Pakistan has declined from nearly 17 per cent in 2001 to 2pc in 2022. This is largely on account of the increasing transparency in the global banking system.

Consider that in 2001, Pakistan’s offshore financial wealth stashed away in Switzerland was $11bn. In 2022, that figure was down to $1bn. On the flip side, the growing transparency in the banking system incentivises a shift towards real estate. And Dubai is the favoured destination by far.

Data gathered for the Atlas of the Offshore World shows that London, with $740 million, comes in a distant second behind Dubai ($10bn plus) for Pakistanis looking to invest in offshore real estate. Singapore is third, with $120m.

The dark side of Dubai

Dubai is a global financial hub often described as a playground for the world’s rich. It prides itself on being an open economy for companies and individuals who want to make investments. But the glamorous emirate has a darker reputation as a tax haven, and top destination for murky sources of cash and money laundering — often through real estate transactions. In 2019, Transparency International dubbed the emirate a ‘money laundering paradise’, highlighting that individuals with questionable sources of income are able to invest in Dubai without restrictions.

A number of individuals that journalists with the OCCRP interviewed, including a former governor of a central bank in the region, spoke about parallel systems being in place.

Two Arab lawyers with representative offices in the UAE told a journalist with OCCRP that there are two economic, financial and security systems running in parallel at the same time. One is formal where all rules and guidelines apply and which conforms to international requirements. The other operates outside the formal system; it survives on cuts from criminals, sanctioned persons and entities — shady investors and millionaires who don’t like to be asked where they got their money. One of the lawyers said, “Private jets full of money are landing frequently in Dubai. No one can ask who the money is for. It’s taken out and deposited in special accounts…”

In early March, Diamant Salihu from Swedish Television did an in-person undercover interview for this project with a salesperson working with Damac, the property development company, at their sales office in Dubai. When discussing the options for payment, the Damac employee at one point told Mr Salihu they can accept crypto currency as well as “full cash payment”, explaining, “If you bring bags of cash we can accept that[…] . There is no limit on cash actually”. He added that “zero questions” would be asked about the cash.

In response to the OCCRP’s questions, Damac Properties denied that it was their policy to propose cash payments by customers. “If a customer wishes to settle by cash, such payment would trigger and be subject to an enhanced due diligence and local declaration and reporting actions. Had your undercover reporter proceeded further […] they would have witnessed the scrutiny and the heightened measures we apply to transactions that trigger red flags.” (excerpt)

The OCCRP reached out to UAE authorities for their response. An official from the UAE embassy in Norway issued the following statement: “The UAE takes its role in protecting the integrity of the global financial system extremely seriously. In February, the Financial Action Taskforce (FATF), the global standard-setter for measures to fight money laundering, praised the UAE’s significant progress. In its continuing pursuit of global criminals, the UAE works closely with international partners to disrupt and deter all forms of illicit finance. The UAE is committed to continuing these efforts and actions more than ever today and over the longer term.”

To support its contention, the embassy cited the following figures: “The UAE has issued fines of more than AED 115 million in relation to money laundering” and “seized assets of more than AED 925 million in relation to breaches of AML practices and procedures”.

Dubai was added to the FATF’s grey list in 2022 but was taken off in February 2024. Some experts, however, have expressed concerns that the move was premature and driven by geopolitical concerns.

According to the EU Tax Observatory’s Global Tax Evasion Report 2024: “Real estate is a particularly serious blind spot in international information exchange. Just like financial assets, there are many legitimate reasons for holding real estate abroad, but there are also concerns that offshore real estate, in some cases, may be used for money laundering, tax evasion, escaping international sanctions, or other financial crimes. The attractiveness of real estate as an asset class lies in its relatively stable value over time, the possibility to manipulate prices, and possibilities for anonymous ownership in countries with weak property registers.”

That is what makes the Dubai property leaks so fascinating, because they give us a glimpse into how well-heeled Pakistanis play the real estate market in their favourite offshore investment destination.

The level of detail contained in the leaks is astonishing. There are names, dates of birth, iqama numbers, expiry dates, passport information, telephone numbers and emails of Pakistani passport holders who are listed as having invested in single or multiple Dubai properties. There are also details of purchase and rental transactions. The properties owned by Pakistanis range from studio apartments and commercial properties to entire buildings and six-bedroom villas. Pakistanis are listed as owners in some of the most expensive districts of Dubai, including Dubai Marina, Emirates Hills, Business Bay, Palm Jumeirah and Al Barsha.

For the purpose of this investigation, Dawn reporters examined data linked to public office holders, elected politicians, military personnel and PEPs and undertook a rigorous verification process. The process involved running checks on listed owners by putting their information through the Dubai Land Department (DLD) system. Many of the checks yielded a positive match for ownership, which means that many of the individuals mentioned in this story are still listed as owners in the DLD system today.

The data shared with Dawn reporters is a snapshot of Pakistanis’ investment in Dubai property during a specific period. It is not a historic account of property ownership. It is also not a true picture of all properties bought by Pakistanis (elected or unelected), as many owners remain undetected. Those who purchased property via a lesser known third party, or a shell company, remain undetected in this story.

“Every elite family [in Pakistan] — armed forces, politicians, business people — everyone rich has property in Dubai. This business of taxing them is a small matter; the larger issue is the lack of transparency and the close ties between the elite in Pakistan and the UAE,” Shabbar Zaidi told Dawn.

Data storm

The property data at the heart of the project comes from a series of leaks of more than 100 datasets. Most of the data comes from the Dubai Land Department, as well as publicly owned utility companies. The data includes the listed owner of each property, as well as other identifying information such as his or her date of birth, passport number, and nationality. In some cases, the data captured renters instead of owners.*

Journalists used the data as a starting point to explore the landscape of foreign property ownership in Dubai. They spent months verifying the identities of the people who appeared in the leaked data, as well as confirming their ownership status, using official records, open source research, and other leaked datasets. They identified many Dubai property owners whose presence in the emirate is in the public interest to report on, including people who have been accused or convicted of crimes, face international sanctions, or are politically exposed persons (PEPs).


Above is better report and lol at that tax rate, insane.
 
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Lol @ Dawn, India with its economy and ease of buying properties in Dubai have 35k properties, Pakistanis with that economy have 23k properties majority of which are generals and elite still Dawn is trying to spin like India is more corrupt without giving any proper information on Pakistani owners.

I haven't read Dawn in a long time, my impression is that it was mostly a tame and docile outlet whose main purpose was not to rub the establishment up the wrong way. But regardless of Dawn, the OP has highlighted the Pakistan flight of capital engineered at the expense of the nation. That is what should be focused on.
 
Sell all these properties if they are not declared and pay off some loans to reduce Pakistan's debt.
 
I haven't read Dawn in a long time, my impression is that it was mostly a tame and docile outlet whose main purpose was not to rub the establishment up the wrong way. But regardless of Dawn, the OP has highlighted the Pakistan flight of capital engineered at the expense of the nation. That is what should be focused on.
That is dangerous because Dawn was among 74 publications involved in bringing out the story, this gives a before hand update to ppl that can use that information in the establishment .

Dawn used to be really credible, during 2000s, it’s where I actually learnt about Pakistan side of things.
 
Not sure why the surprise, it’s a well known fact sub continent is rampant with corruption at all levels.
 
That is dangerous because Dawn was among 74 publications involved in bringing out the story, this gives a before hand update to ppl that can use that information in the establishment .

Dawn used to be really credible, during 2000s, it’s where I actually learnt about Pakistan side of things.
dawn is still the best paper in pakistan.
your just whining cause india is not being kissed up to.
 
Properties worth almost 12bn $. This is not a leak for any Pakistani. People in Pakistan know this fact very well all these politicians, bureaucrats, and generals have properties there. Not a hidden fact for people here in Pakistan.

Just sell all these properties and the debt of Pakistan is all sorted out, gone. No better service for your country than to pay off the debt of your country. Let's go to all those folks whose names are on that list.
 
No wonders here. The whole elite mafia in Pakistan is corrupt.

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Ex-military men in Dubai leaks

RETIRED military officials, some of whom have passed away, also appear as listed owners till the spring of 2022 in the Dubai property leaks. Many were visible in the data as their ownership documents included their rank.

For properties purchased off plan, the market value of the completed property is mentioned, but buyers may have paid only a certain percentage of the total property value as a down payment.

Retired Lt Gen Alam Jan Mahsud (now deceased) and his spouse appear in the leaks as listed owners of three properties. However, neither of them are owners of those properties today. Transaction data obtained by Norwegian financial outlet E24 and Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) shows that the property, a three-bedroom apartment in Al Hamri, was priced in 2009 at AED 1,150,000 or $313,000 (calculated at the current exchange rate of 3.6 dirham to a dollar) and sold for a little over half a million dollars in 2021.

Retired Lt Gen Shafaat Ullah Shah, a senior military officer during the tenure of former dictator Gen Pervez Musharraf (whose name also appears in the data), is a listed owner in the leaks for a property purchased in 2015. Dubai Land Department (DLD) records show he still owned the property as of February 2024 alongside his son. Mr Shafaat Ullah Shah served as military secretary to Mr Musharraf, as corps commander in Lahore, and as chief of logistics staff at the general headquarters in Rawalpindi. The purchase data obtained by OCCRP shows that this property, a two-bedroom apartment in Barsha Heights, was purchased for $139,398 in 2015. In response to questions sent by Dawn, Mr Shafaat ullah Shah said that all assets owned by him or his immediate family members, as well as income generated on them, were disclosed to regulators, including the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR).

Retired Maj Gen Syed Ehtasham Zamir, a former head of ISI’s political wing who passed away in 2015, appears as a listed owner for the 2020-2022 period in the leaks, but is no longer the owner of this property. His name appears in connection with a studio apartment which was priced in 2008 for $54,181 and sold in August 2019 for $63,438.

Mr Zamir’s wife made a down payment for a three-bedroom off-plan apartment in the Address Harbour Point Tower, which had a market price of $877,761 in January 2018. However, in a response to questions sent by Dawn, his son said the property was sold for around $160,000 in September 2021. He added that his parents’ properties were bought after their Pakistan home was sold, and that all income was declared to the FBR and is part of army records.

His children, a son and two daughters, are listed owners of a two-bedroom apartment in Marina Arcade purchased in July 2017 for $440,382. The total rental income generated from this property for the period from July 2019 to July 2024 is $130,141. They are still owners of that property today.

Retired Lt Gen Muhammad Akram is the listed owner of two studio apartments in the Elite Residences 4 building. Mr Akram is no longer the current owner of the properties, which were sold in the same period to one individual. Purchase data shows that both studios were bought in September 2013 for around $150,000 each and later sold in 2022 for an unknown amount.

Retired Maj Gen Ghazanfar Ali Khan appears in the leaks as the listed owner of a residential unit in Al Warsan First. As of March 2024, he was still listed in the DLD system as the owner of this property. Transaction data shows the property was purchased in October 2010 for $81,406. The rental income generated from it between December 2013 and February 2024 was $64,117.

Retired Brig Nadir Mir is listed in the data as the owner of a studio apartment in Al Warsan First. The DLD search shows he still owned the property as of March 2024. The property was bought in March 2010 for $54,110. From 2014 to 2023, the listed rental income for the property is $33,052.

The late Gen Musharraf and his wife are listed as owners of one property, with his spouse showing as its present owner. The three-bedroom apartment in Sadaf 2 appears to have been purchased in April 2012 for $449,233.

Ex DG military land, retired Maj Gen Syed Najamul Hassan Shah, is also listed as the owner of an off-plan property in Al Saqran Tower. The property’s market price in June 2012 was $361,942. The DLD system shows this property is still owned by him today. He is also linked to two other properties in Al Thanya Fifth Al Shera and in Al Hebiah Third, but neither appears to be owned by him today.

Retired Maj Azizul Aman Zuberi and a family member are listed owners of a property in Shakespeare Circus 1, which was valued at $147,797 in November 2013 and sold in April 2022.

Retired Major Gen Ausaf Ali is listed as owner of a studio apartment in Al Yufra 2, and still owns this property according to the DLD system. It was purchased in February 2016 for $139,298.

Retired Maj Gen Raja Arif Nazir, HI(M) is listed as owner against two off-plan properties. These include a one-bedroom residential unit in Damac Hills Artesia Tower valued in February 2015 at $311,931. And the second is a one-bedroom apartment in Golf Promenade that was valued at $342,791 in June 2014. For the latter, a rental income of $36,755 was generated between mid-2021 and mid-2024. Mr Nazir still owned these properties as of March 2024, according to the DLD.

Retired Air Vice Marshal Khalid Masood Rajput’s name also appeared in the leaks.

SOURCE: DAWN
 
No wonders here. The whole elite mafia in Pakistan is corrupt.

---------------------------

Ex-military men in Dubai leaks

RETIRED military officials, some of whom have passed away, also appear as listed owners till the spring of 2022 in the Dubai property leaks. Many were visible in the data as their ownership documents included their rank.

For properties purchased off plan, the market value of the completed property is mentioned, but buyers may have paid only a certain percentage of the total property value as a down payment.

Retired Lt Gen Alam Jan Mahsud (now deceased) and his spouse appear in the leaks as listed owners of three properties. However, neither of them are owners of those properties today. Transaction data obtained by Norwegian financial outlet E24 and Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) shows that the property, a three-bedroom apartment in Al Hamri, was priced in 2009 at AED 1,150,000 or $313,000 (calculated at the current exchange rate of 3.6 dirham to a dollar) and sold for a little over half a million dollars in 2021.

Retired Lt Gen Shafaat Ullah Shah, a senior military officer during the tenure of former dictator Gen Pervez Musharraf (whose name also appears in the data), is a listed owner in the leaks for a property purchased in 2015. Dubai Land Department (DLD) records show he still owned the property as of February 2024 alongside his son. Mr Shafaat Ullah Shah served as military secretary to Mr Musharraf, as corps commander in Lahore, and as chief of logistics staff at the general headquarters in Rawalpindi. The purchase data obtained by OCCRP shows that this property, a two-bedroom apartment in Barsha Heights, was purchased for $139,398 in 2015. In response to questions sent by Dawn, Mr Shafaat ullah Shah said that all assets owned by him or his immediate family members, as well as income generated on them, were disclosed to regulators, including the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR).

Retired Maj Gen Syed Ehtasham Zamir, a former head of ISI’s political wing who passed away in 2015, appears as a listed owner for the 2020-2022 period in the leaks, but is no longer the owner of this property. His name appears in connection with a studio apartment which was priced in 2008 for $54,181 and sold in August 2019 for $63,438.

Mr Zamir’s wife made a down payment for a three-bedroom off-plan apartment in the Address Harbour Point Tower, which had a market price of $877,761 in January 2018. However, in a response to questions sent by Dawn, his son said the property was sold for around $160,000 in September 2021. He added that his parents’ properties were bought after their Pakistan home was sold, and that all income was declared to the FBR and is part of army records.

His children, a son and two daughters, are listed owners of a two-bedroom apartment in Marina Arcade purchased in July 2017 for $440,382. The total rental income generated from this property for the period from July 2019 to July 2024 is $130,141. They are still owners of that property today.

Retired Lt Gen Muhammad Akram is the listed owner of two studio apartments in the Elite Residences 4 building. Mr Akram is no longer the current owner of the properties, which were sold in the same period to one individual. Purchase data shows that both studios were bought in September 2013 for around $150,000 each and later sold in 2022 for an unknown amount.

Retired Maj Gen Ghazanfar Ali Khan appears in the leaks as the listed owner of a residential unit in Al Warsan First. As of March 2024, he was still listed in the DLD system as the owner of this property. Transaction data shows the property was purchased in October 2010 for $81,406. The rental income generated from it between December 2013 and February 2024 was $64,117.

Retired Brig Nadir Mir is listed in the data as the owner of a studio apartment in Al Warsan First. The DLD search shows he still owned the property as of March 2024. The property was bought in March 2010 for $54,110. From 2014 to 2023, the listed rental income for the property is $33,052.

The late Gen Musharraf and his wife are listed as owners of one property, with his spouse showing as its present owner. The three-bedroom apartment in Sadaf 2 appears to have been purchased in April 2012 for $449,233.

Ex DG military land, retired Maj Gen Syed Najamul Hassan Shah, is also listed as the owner of an off-plan property in Al Saqran Tower. The property’s market price in June 2012 was $361,942. The DLD system shows this property is still owned by him today. He is also linked to two other properties in Al Thanya Fifth Al Shera and in Al Hebiah Third, but neither appears to be owned by him today.

Retired Maj Azizul Aman Zuberi and a family member are listed owners of a property in Shakespeare Circus 1, which was valued at $147,797 in November 2013 and sold in April 2022.

Retired Major Gen Ausaf Ali is listed as owner of a studio apartment in Al Yufra 2, and still owns this property according to the DLD system. It was purchased in February 2016 for $139,298.

Retired Maj Gen Raja Arif Nazir, HI(M) is listed as owner against two off-plan properties. These include a one-bedroom residential unit in Damac Hills Artesia Tower valued in February 2015 at $311,931. And the second is a one-bedroom apartment in Golf Promenade that was valued at $342,791 in June 2014. For the latter, a rental income of $36,755 was generated between mid-2021 and mid-2024. Mr Nazir still owned these properties as of March 2024, according to the DLD.

Retired Air Vice Marshal Khalid Masood Rajput’s name also appeared in the leaks.

SOURCE: DAWN

That's a long list and only limited to properties in Dubai. Imagine if someone exposes their assets in Western countries, especially their favourite retirement destination the US. Of course we will never get to see this because of heavy lobbying in the US congress by US fast food chains, all that franchises run by the establishment elite?!

Just in this report:
- Lt Gen Alam Jan Mahsud (now deceased)
- Lt Gen Shafaat Ullah Shah
- Maj Gen Syed Ehtasham Zamir
- Lt Gen Muhammad Akram
- Maj Gen Ghazanfar Ali Khan
- Brig Nadir Mir
- Maj Gen Syed Najamul Hassan Shah
- Maj Azizul Aman Zuberi
- Major Gen Ausaf Ali
- Maj Gen Raja Arif Nazir
- Air Vice Marshal Khalid Masood
This list of course doesn't include the names of near and dear ones who also own properties in Dubai.

The irony is that in the UK, considered a first world country, the ranks of Brigadier, Colonel, Lieutenant colonel, Major, Captain etc.. earning ballpark £40-60k annually, wouldn't even be able to dream of buying additional properties in Dubai!
 
dawn is still the best paper in pakistan.
your just whining cause india is not being kissed up to.
? I’m literally quoting the article in the OP, where they were focusing on India when Pakistan is a bigger anomaly..
 
dawn is still the best paper in pakistan.
your just whining cause india is not being kissed up to.
Not anymore. It could barely say a word on the chaos unleashed on PK since April 22. Dawn benefits from the largesse of the Junta and it has to code its criticism in obscure language
 
Mohsin Naqvi reveals 'wife owns properties not only in Dubai but also in UK'

After property leaks under the “Dubai Unlocked” project sent shockwaves across the country, Interior Minister Senator Mohsin Naqvi revealed on Thursday that all of his properties — which he and his wife owned for over a decade according to him — were “declared” with relevant authorities as there was nothing new in the leaked property records.

Naqvi — who is holding multiple portfolios in the incumbent government, Minister for Narcotics Control, Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) chairman and a senator — revealed that his wife has owned properties not only in Dubai but also in the United Kingdom (UK) for over a decade.

He gave a detailed response to the Dubai leaks in a press conference in Lahore today after the leaked property records named several prominent personalities in Pakistan, including government officials, politicians, military generals and other individuals.

He criticised that it was right of the national media to report major developments but a wrong impression should not be created that someone owned properties via illegal means or did not declare it before the relevant authorities.


 
And then the Naqvi sahab says AJK had foreign miscreants lol bhai aap hi foreigner ho
 
Mohsin Naqvi reveals 'wife owns properties not only in Dubai but also in UK'

After property leaks under the “Dubai Unlocked” project sent shockwaves across the country, Interior Minister Senator Mohsin Naqvi revealed on Thursday that all of his properties — which he and his wife owned for over a decade according to him — were “declared” with relevant authorities as there was nothing new in the leaked property records.

Naqvi — who is holding multiple portfolios in the incumbent government, Minister for Narcotics Control, Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) chairman and a senator — revealed that his wife has owned properties not only in Dubai but also in the United Kingdom (UK) for over a decade.

He gave a detailed response to the Dubai leaks in a press conference in Lahore today after the leaked property records named several prominent personalities in Pakistan, including government officials, politicians, military generals and other individuals.

He criticised that it was right of the national media to report major developments but a wrong impression should not be created that someone owned properties via illegal means or did not declare it before the relevant authorities.


He should show how the money was taken abroad. If there is nothing to hide, why has this pathetic puppet not give a money trail and did not declare them in his Senate election candidature
 
He should show how the money was taken abroad. If there is nothing to hide, why has this pathetic puppet not give a money trail and did not declare them in his Senate election candidature
I remember when he joined PCB all posters were praising him, no-nonsense man or something lol
 
I remember when he joined PCB all posters were praising him, no-nonsense man or something lol
All the posters that support every criminal in PK. These guys are in a small minority. In most societies they would be considered to be a fascist lunatic fringe
 
Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi calls for inquiry into undeclared Dubai holdings

Being a businessman, I will invest my money where I like, Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi said on Thursday.

“My wife has a property in London. She had a property in Dubai in 2017 which she sold in 2023. I was not a public office-holder 10 years ago,” he said.

“Tax has been paid on these properties,” he said, clarifying his position with regard to Dubai Leaks in which an astounding volume of leaked property data that includes over 23,000 properties, has been listed as belonging to Pakistani nationals up to the spring of 2022.

According to the data gathered by the Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, Mr Naqvi’s wife is listed as an owner of a high-value property in the leaks.

“There is no illegality in investing abroad. Being businessman I will invest where I like,” he said, adding the FIA should investigate those who acquired offshore property illegally.

Mr Naqvi said he knew many media houses who had properties in Dubai, adding that there was no problem if investment was made abroad legally.

“No matter how much criticism is made against me I will focus on service delivery,” said the minister, who has been subjected to severe criticism on social media after revelation that his wife’s properties are abroad.

The minister said one of the reasons India was progressing because it supported its businessmen, while in Pakistan if a businessman progressed, he was labelled as thief.

In reply to a question, Mr Naqvi said KP Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur’s statement of taking over a state building might be a political one. However, if such a situation arose, it would be dealt with appropriately, he warned.

Replying to another question about PTI’s demand for holding talks with the establishment, he said if talks were held, they should be with the government.

Regarding a huge backlog of passports, the minister said he was aware of the problem as a passport was being issued in five to six months.

“I am making efforts to overcome this problem,” he added.

SOURCE: DAWN
 
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