Pakistan to file libel case against British tabloid
Pakistan on Wednesday decided to file a libel case against British tabloid, The Sun, seeking Rs 10 billion in damages for publishing a "false story" about how terrorists could have obtained fake Pakistani passports and joined the country's team for the London Olympic Games.
- Press Trust of India
- Updated: July 25, 2012 09:02 PM IST
Pakistan on Wednesday decided to file a libel case against British tabloid, The Sun, seeking Rs 10 billion in damages for publishing a "false story" about how terrorists could have obtained fake Pakistani passports and joined the country's team for the London Olympic Games.
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The decision to file the libel case in a British court was made at a meeting of the federal cabinet chaired this afternoon by Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf.
The cabinet thoroughly discussed the issue of the visa scam and decided to take legal action against The Sun, officials said.
The Interior Secretary, chairman of the National Database and Registration Authority (NADRA) and the director general of the Passport Department briefed the cabinet on the issue. Officials described the British tabloid's report on the passport scam as "false propaganda".
"The cabinet ordered NADRA to file a defamation suit (against The Sun) after consulting the Law Ministry," Information Minister Qamar Zaman Kaira told the media after the cabinet meeting.
He said "dirty propaganda was unleashed against Pakistan" and that the tabloid "does not have a good reputation". Official sources said a lawsuit seeking Rs 10 billion in damages would be filed in a British court.
The cabinet ordered the Federal Investigation Agency to halt its probe into the passport scam in light of the decision to file a lawsuit.
Before the cabinet meeting, a special investigation team formed by Interior Ministry chief Rehman Malik to probe the matter had arrested 11 people, including officials of NADRA and the passport department and employees of a Lahore-based travel agency.
In a message posted on Twitter, Malik said: "No mercy in this passport scandal. All those involved in this passport/NADRA scam/conspiracy shall be booked and be brought to justice".
He said in another message that the investigation team comprising representatives of the FIA, NADRA and ISI had been "ordered to investigate the facts and to identify the real culprits in this racket".
The investigation will also ascertain if there was any "conspiracy/sting (operation) against Pakistan", Malik said in another message.
NADRA Chairman Tariq Malik said the tabloid's expose centred round a man named Mohammad Ali Asad, who had renewed his national identity card on July 10 and subsequently obtained a new passport.
"Since the same person applied to renew his own ID card and for provision of a passport, nothing illegal was done," he said.
Earlier, The Sun reported its journalist had infiltrated a criminal ring that offered false passports, visas and access to the 2012 London Olympics as "bogus support staff" of the Pakistani team.
The ring provided its undercover reporter a genuine Pakistani passport in a false name, the tabloid claimed.
According to the tabloid, the scam centred round Lahore-based Dream Land travel agency and a politician named Abid Chodhary, who claimed he could get a two-month visa and smuggle a person into the games as part of Pakistan's Olympic squad for 7,000 pounds.