Opposition wants govt to secure US guarantees

Debate to begin today, but negoti­ations will also contin­ue.


Zia Khan March 27, 2012
Opposition wants govt to secure US guarantees

ISLAMABAD:


The leader of the opposition had had a week to go through the recommendations of a parliamentary panel regarding foreign policy.


When he rose from his seat during the joint session of Parliament on Monday, Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan was typically critical of the government – except his criticism had little to do with the recommendations of the Parliamentary Committee on National Security (PCNS) or, for that matter with foreign policy in general.

Instead, Nisar straight away drew attention of the house to the power outages.

It was later reported that the opposition and the government were actually locked in backroom negotiations on the debate on reviewing ties with the US.

The opposition on Monday urged the government to seek firm guarantees from the US that it would honour an eventual resolution demanding a halt to drone attacks inside tribal areas and apologise over last year’s airstrikes on Pakistani border posts.

“We have made it clear that the government should first ensure that the resolution will be respected (by Washington). Only then we can think of supporting it,” a top Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) leader told The Express Tribune.

The ruling Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) sent PCNS Chairman Senator Raba Rabbani and Religious Affairs Minister Syed Khursheed Shah, to the opposition parties to convince them to support the recommendations.

Chaudhry Nisar, Ishaq Dar, Mushahidullah Khan and Zahid Hamid represented the opposition during the talks. JUI-F chief Maulana Fazlur Rehman also joined negotiations and supported the stance taken by the PML-N.

During Monday evening’s meeting in the chambers of Chaudhry Nisar, both the government and opposition decided that Parliament would open the debate from Tuesday (today) and negotiations would also continue at the same time.

The PML-N leader said the government negotiators did not commit to seeking guarantees from Washington. “They promised to get back to us tomorrow (Tuesday) after consulting with concerned quarters.”

Published in The Express Tribune, March 27th, 2012.

COMMENTS (13)

Harry Stone | 12 years ago | Reply

@Moise:

It is a resoultion and as such has no bearing whatsoever. The UN general assembly is always passing resultions that have no meaning. They just passed one on Syria and it too had no meaning........You need to work harder.

If you are to hold me responsible for the civilian deaths in PAK, then I and the rest of the world are prepared to hold you responsible for the deaths in the US, France and India because those deaths resulted from the actions of PAK.

Moise | 12 years ago | Reply

Covert war is illegal as well. POTUS can go fascist and bypass Congress, this wont make it legal.

Here is UN link http://www.un.org/documents/ga/res/50/ares50-172.htm

700+ civilians killed by US in Pakistan alone. If you are defending US, you are just as responsible for those civillian deaths.

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