

The joint session of parliament on October 5 was called by the prime minister and is a welcome return to best custom and practice. The national security of the state has come under sustained threat after the assassination of Burhan Wani, since when relations with India have spiralled steadily downwards. The PM told the House that it was for the international community and the United Nations to give the Kashmiris their right to self-determination and free them from what he described as “Indian tyranny” in the occupied valley. It is now 70 years since they lost their freedoms and wrongs need to be righted.
The session was symbolic in that today there is a need to display national unity that transcends party politics and that very unity needed to be publicly displayed rather than within a closed-door meeting. The need to build a united front, at least in terms of national security, is vital. Political differences will remain but on security at least there can and should be common cause. Underlying differences are forever going to remain as long as multi-party politics is the chosen form of governance, and those who wish ill to Pakistan will be both quick and keen to exploit any splits in the ranks.
That said, and laudable as the convening of the joint session is, the PML-N needs to address some fundamental issues that have arisen since the last general election, not the least of these being an apparent unwillingness to listen to any other party or individual who may disagree with them. The transfer of debate out of the public domain is symptomatic of that. The general public only knows what was discussed in the all-parties meeting on October 3 by the post-meeting statements of those in attendance. A record may be available to those with internet access but hardly represents the epitome of transparency. Opposition parties have further cause for grievance over the matter of foreign policy and its development, of which there is a notable absence of public debate.
To conclude, there was an unfortunate absence in parliament — the Pakistan-Tehreek-e-Insaf(PTI) led by Imran Khan. The party absented itself on the grounds that it would be endorsing the legitimacy of the PM if it attended, which the PTI claims he has lost as he has not accounted adequately in the PTI eyes for the revelations of the Panama Papers. In current parlance, the PTI has got the optics of their decision to opt out very wrong. Whilst it may reflect the internal priorities of the party and individual political interests, this cannot be allowed to trump the overarching issue of a collective stance on national security.
Parliament is in need of revival, of re-energising, and bringing back to the forefront of the national political narrative. It needs restoring as the workshop of democratic process, where the nuts and bolts of governance are forged on the anvil of debate, where differences are tackled with pragmatism and the needs of the state are paramount. This joint session was both timely and an opportunity to re-boot the House. We hope and trust it will not be an opportunity lost.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 6th, 2016.
Like Opinion & Editorial on Facebook, follow @ETOpEd on Twitter to receive all updates on all our daily pieces.
COMMENTS
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ