Pakistani rulers and parliamentarians please come clean on the following 6 questions..!
An article of 2 October 2012 is still waiting for answers from the past and present governments and parliamentarians of Pakistan.
Our rulers owe us answers to the following 6 questions:
Hope our rulers and parliamentarians are aware of a research which reveals that suicide rates have gone up in the countries taking loans from the IMF etc.
Our worthy MNA’s and Senators Must obtain the answers to the following questions from the former Minister of Finance Mr. Abdul Hafeez Sheikh (who was also the key man in the privatisation of the PTCL) and also from the incumbent finance minister Mr. Ishaq Dar.
1. Pakistan is repaying $7.6 billion to the IMF. Did we receive exactly this much amount or the total sum was less than this figure?
2. How much amount of interest Pakistan will be paying over the principle sum of this loan of $7.6 billion from the IMF? Or the IMF will be charging interest on the whole sanctioned amount of $11.3 billion?
3. Did Pakistan pay and what was the total bill for the traveling, boarding and lodging of IMF delegations’s recent visit to UAE, for discussions with our economic team?
4. Besides the interest, how much service, handlers commission and or other charges were deducted by the IMF, on its loan of $7.6 billion to Pakistan? V V important question.
5. How much service charges or penalty was charged by the IMF to Pakistan, for not utilizing or obtaining the remaining $3.7 billion amount, from the originally sanctioned loan amount of $11.3 billion; because Pakistan got only $7.6 billion from IMF?
6. When will Pakistan get its overdue payment of $800 million from the Etisalat Telecom, which is controlling the whole PTCL management and other affairs, with a minority share holding? Why not reconsider the cancellation of the privatisation deal of the PTCL, in view of the serious default since the year 2006, by the UAE based telecom company ETISALAT? There is another option to resolve this problem by writing off this amount of $800 million (which in over 8 years must have grown over $3 billion) and treating it as gift, from the people of Pakistan to owners of the ETISALAT.