ill-gotten wealth. Pakistan can ask the Swiss government that being the damaged state, it should be given control of the assets. The News has learnt that Pakistani lawyers in Switzerland have been asked by Pakistani lawyers to invoke the 2011 law and ask the Swiss government to return the assets to the requesting State - Pakistan, in this case.
After Pakistan’s Supreme Court issued decision about the NRO and disqualified prime minister Yusuf Raza Gilani in April 2012, it could be argued that Pakistan’s withdrawal was flawed as it was not made in accordance with the Constitution and the law of Pakistan. Despite the insistence of the Swiss prosecutor that the cases will not be reopened now, Pakistan can argue that the PPP government’s refusal to open the cases and withdrawing from the proceedings in 2008 was not made in good faith.
Pakistan has two more options available in addition to the 2011 Swiss law. It can ask the Swiss authorities to reactivate their own penal cases, particularly regarding the money laundering acts committed after Pakistan withdrew from the Swiss penal proceedings. The third option is to ask the Swiss authorities to reactivate the mutual legal assistance proceedings. This means that Pakistan could initiate a penal investigation within the country and ask Switzerland to cooperate. Pakistan can then finalise its penal proceedings, sentence the offenders and confiscate their ill-gotten wealth and ask Switzerland to transfer the concerned assets to Pakistan.
In nutshell, all Pakistan needs to do is it to show its seriousness about re-opening the cases and explore various options available to it.
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