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Two more Islamic banks likely in Pakistan PDF Print E-mail
Source: Internews   
Monday, 21 August 2006

Image KARACHI • Pakistan’s central bank is considering granting Islamic banking licences to two new applicants, a senior official has said.

Director Islamic Banking Department of the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) Pervez Saeed said a “couple of new licences are in the pipeline”, but preferred not to give details.

Presently four full-fledged Islamic banks are doing business in the country. According to him, the number of Islamic bank branches including dedicated Islamic branches of commercial banks has reached 100 against 7,000 conventional bank branches.
He said Indonesia started Islamic banking in mid-1990s and the share of Islamic banking in total banking was 1.34 per cent while Malaysia began Islamic banking in 1983 and its share in total banking was 11.6 per cent.Pakistan re-launched Islamic banking three years ago and its share in total banking crossed 0.1 per cent, Saeed said, terming the growth rate “satisfactory”.

He disclosed the issue of Islamic banking was being raised once again with the Supreme Court of Pakistan, but did not divulge the details. The official said the Supreme Court, in its landmark judgment on Riba, wanted to fix a timeline for the implementation of interest-free banking in the country, but the regulators argued there must not be any timeframe and the public must be free to choose between Riba-free banking or otherwise, so both the systems should be allowed to run parallel to each other.

The SBP official said ultimately the efficiency of Islamic banking would prevail, adding the Islamic Financial Board, headquartered in Malaysia, “nowadays is busy in formulating standards for Islamic banks and these standards will be implemented globally.”

 

Last Updated ( Sunday, 27 August 2006 )
 
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