In a press release, the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) explained in detail all about benami transaction or property.

Following is the extract for a better understanding:

A benami transaction/property is:

1) When a property is transferred to, or is held by, a person but it has been paid for by another person – a trustee and wife, child, brother or sister

2) A transaction or arrangement of a property made in a fictitious name, or a transaction or arrangement of a property where the owner is not aware of, or denies knowledge of, such ownership

3) A transaction or arrangement of a property where the person providing the consideration is not traceable or is fictitious.

Types of benami properties are:

Plots, houses, shopping plazas, shops, housing schemes, bank accounts, vehicles, business shares, jewellery, foreign currency, legal documents and intangible properties, having financial value can all be used as benami properties.

Law against benami transaction/property

The Federal Board of Revenue has enforced the Benami Transactions (Prohibition) Rules, 2019. Officials of the Inland Revenue Service have been assigned the duty to establish cases against benami properties and submit a challan to the adjudication authority within 120 working days.

During this period, the sale, purchase and transfer of such property has been banned till further orders. If the crime of benami transactions is proved, criminal proceedings will then be initiated against the accused persons. The convicted can be imprisoned for one to seven years.

Reward for Whistle-blowers

Under the law, the whistle-blowers are entitled to a cash reward for providing credible information leading to the detection of a benami property or transaction.

If property is worth Rs.2,000,000 or less, 5 per cent of price of the property will be given to informer. If property’s worth is more than Rs.2,000,000, 4 per cent will be given to informer and where the value of property is more than Rs.5,000,000, 3 per cent will be given to informer.

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