News from the closed door parliamentary session - Thread for news

This thread is to collect all information and discussion from the goings on in the closed door parliamentary session.

http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/236135,pakistan-spy-chief-briefs-lawmakers-on-horrors-of-taliban-threat.html

Islamabad - Taliban militants are using children as fighters and suicide bombers, Pakistan’s new spy chief told lawmakers in a rare briefing on threats posed by Islamic militants the country’s North West Frontier Province (NWFP), media reports and officials said Thursday. Militants are brainwashing innocent children to use them for killing people, Lieutenant General Ahmad Shuja Pasha, who was appointed director general of the military’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) last week, told the closed-door joint session of the parliament’s upper and lower houses the previous day.

Horrifying videos and slides shown during the presentation bore images of children, aged 10 to 14, carrying various sorts of lethal weapons, the Urdu-language Jang newspaper reported.

A female lawmaker fainted when a 10-year-old child was shown cutting a person’s throat with a knife.

Young men were used in a majority of the suicide attacks carried out in the last couple of years across the country, Pasha told parliament.

The briefing, which continued on Thursday, was called by President Asif Ali Zardari to build national consensus on the country’s fight against the Taliban and al-Qaeda, who recently intensified suicide bombings against security troops, public places and the nation’s political leaders.

The ISI chief told the joint house meeting that Pakistan’s military had made enormous sacrifices since it joined the international fight against terrorism following al-Qaeda’s attacks on Untied States in 2001.

“The lawmakers were informed that 1,368 soldiers were martyred (killed) and 3,348 wounded,” military sources told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa.

Meanwhile, 581 fighters of Arab and Central Asian origin, believed to be linked with the al-Qaeda network, were eliminated, 311 injured and 330 arrested in actions across the country, said the official who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Pakistani security forces carried out several offensives in tribal areas and some districts of NWFP, and killed 2,224 local Taliban militants, injured 1,089 and arrested 2,414 over the last seven years.

The civilian casualties in dozens of suicide or other attacks by militants as well as air air artillery strikes by Pakistani forces were not included in the data.

Re: News from the closed door parliamentary session - Thread for news

How big is FATA ? How difficult it is for the Armed forces to do a massive operation once for all . Like conduct house to house search and cleans the area off of those mischief makers ?
All other borders are calm , can we not send each and every armed personnel to the area for this operation Clean Sweep ? It is not like that Armed forces have never done such kind of operation.

FATA is not a hill or town, it is rather a big area, its not easy to conduct house-to-house operation. It might take months and months. Last time our army tried to surround militants in Waziristan (or was it other part of FATA??) our army got surrounded by militants and ended up “negotiating” :smiley:

By Absar Alam

ISLAMABAD: Dissatisfied with the contents of Wednesday’s briefing, the parliamentarians are unwilling to grant the much-needed “seal of approval” to the government on its policy of war on terror and a heated question-answer session is expected today.
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Not only that the parliamentarians are likely to question the success of the military operations being conducted in the tribal areas and Swat, they would also want former President/Chief of Army Staff Pervez Musharraf to appear before the joint House and explain the rationale of the policy that has brought war to the doorsteps of each Pakistani.**

It was learnt that the parliamentarians across the divide want to extend their support to the military. However, it is their demand that they must be told all the facts about the war on terror that have led the country to come to this pass.

“It’s an eyewash,” a member of the Parliament told The News after the briefing given to the joint session by DG Military Operations Ahmed Shuja Pasha. “And we will not give a seal of approval to this flawed strategy.”

The first sign of dissatisfaction was shown by the parliamentarians at a meeting of the House Business Committee minutes before the joint session when they refused to accept what they termed “bulldozing” of the proceedings in a single sitting followed by just a 30-minute question-answer session.

“It’s the issue of life and death of Pakistanis, and we need to discuss it threadbare, flagging the weak areas and suggesting modifications in the strategy,” one of the participants of the House Business Committee said. “We don’t want to be seen as a rubber stamp Parliament that Musharraf used to exploit in the past to serve his personal political interests.”

The outcome of the Committee meeting was that the question-answer was extended to four hours followed by a four-day in-camera discussion on the issue.

It was learnt that in Thursday’s question-answer session the parliamentarians would want to know the complete range of Pakistan’s policy on war on terror and the concessions General Musharraf had arbitrarily granted to Washington.

The DGMO will also have to satisfy the parliamentarians why Musharraf kept the nation and state institutions, including the Pakistan Army, in the dark about what he had agreed with the Americans.

The four-day discussion that would start on Monday would not be the end of this debate as the Parliament would ask the military authorities to bring before it complete blueprint of the policy that it would follow in the troubled region.

“The Parliament would discuss the pros and cons of the future policy on war on terror and only then would give a go ahead,” a parliamentarian said. “They cannot satisfy us with the details of what happened in the past. We want to know why and how did we come to this stage, who is responsible for it and what are the options in front of us to choose from for a future course of action.”

To know about the future plan of action, another in-camera session would be arranged later this month in which the military high command will give a future layout of the policy on war on terror and the military operations.

Tell more, MPs to press today

So, what was the otcome of closed door parliamentary session? Are the meetings still going on?