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Wednesday November 27, 2024

SHC seeks details of tax collected from and spent on Karachi

By Jamal Khurshid
March 07, 2023

The Sindh High Court (SHC) on Monday directed the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR), and federal and provincial law officers to submit reports showing figures of the federal and provincial taxes collected from Karachi during last three years.

The high court also asked the authorities how much portion of that tax had been utilised for the development of Karachi. The direction came on a lawsuit filed by Mohammad Rameez Khan and others against what they said non-transparent use of Rs3.6 billion World Bank-funded Competitive and Livable City of Karachi (CLICK) project.

The SHC directed an additional advocate general to file a precise report under his statement containing details of how much sales tax on services and other provincial taxes had been collected from the city of Karachi during the last three years and to what extent it was expended.

The high court also issued a notice to the FBR chairman and deputy attorney general to submit a precise statement showing the figures of federal taxes collected from the city of Karachi during the past three years and the portion of them utilised for the development of Karachi.

The SHC directed the federal and provincial law officers, and FBR to submit their reports in a tabular form. It said that the reports should also contain figures in US dollars. A single bench of the high court headed by Justice Mohammad Faisal Kamal Alam observed that the matter pertained to the well-being of city of Karachi.

The high court also turned down an application of some plaintiffs who wanted to withdraw the lawsuit, observing that all these matters clearly fell within the ambit of public interest litigation and could not be allowed to be withdrawn as requested.

The SHC observed that certain questions were to be answered in these matters, due to which the applications for withdrawal of those suits could not be granted. The bench also issued a notice to the Sindh High Court Bar Association president for the next date of hearing to assist the court.

The counsel of all the plaintiffs, except one, stated that they wanted to withdraw the suits and cited a DHA case in support of their arguments. To this, the bench observed that the reported judgment was about a dispute regarding a parking area and stopping of an illegal construction within the jurisdiction of the Defence Housing Authority and subsequently the respondent in an appeal said it wanted withdrawal of the suit, but the request was declined. However, later that order was set aside by a division bench of the high court.

The SHC observed that facts and controversy of the reported decision were clearly distinguishable from those involved in the present suits. It observed that the Supreme Court had handed down a judgment holding that it was not an absolute right of the plaintiff to withdraw a claim, but the same was subject to certain limitations, in particular, where a right of a third party had been accrued. Consequently, in appropriate cases the request for withdrawal could be declined where it was seen to prevent the court from passing an order.

Some citizens had filed lawsuits pertaining to what they claimed non-transparent use of the World Bank’s funds amounting to Rs3.6 billion for the CLICK project. The plaintiffs had submitted that the Sindh government had initiated the World Bank-funded CLICK project was aimed at improving the urban management, service delivery and business environment in Karachi.

They submitted that the project had no attachment with the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation (KMC), which had to award its projects independently after observing the local laws, including but not limited to the Sindh Public Procurement Act and its Rules so also Procurement Regulations 5.32.

They submitted that a false project under the name of emergency road repair work had also been conceived by the KMC whereby Rs3.6 billion had been awarded to various contractors. They submitted that no step in accordance with the procurement law was taken by the KMC and the contracts were awarded directly to the blue-eyed companies without any advertisement depriving the plaintiffs from participation in the open-bidding process, which might have saved the public money and also enhanced the quality of work.

The plaintiffs submitted that since funds were provided by the World Bank in terms of regulation which asked for its utilisation by the borrowing entity a transparent mechanism that included an advertisement at least.

The high court was requested to declare all the contracts awarded by the Sindh government in violation of procurement rules as unlawful and restrain it from awarding further contracts through direct contracting in violation of the Section 17 of the Sindh Public Procurement Act, 2009 and rules made thereunder.