ISLAMABAD: Senator Farhatullah Babar has urged leaders of all parliamentary parties to pass the
draft legislation concerning intelligence a
gencies as a Private Member’s Bill.
He was speaking at the requisition session of the Senate on Tuesday.
Babar, a Pakistan People’s Party senator, said the federal government had failed to respond to the Senate on the matter of the
draft legislation within the stipulated 60-day period.
He also said that the upper house of the Parliament would be responsible for any further delay in passage of
draft bill on regulation of affairs of the intelligence a
gencies.
The senator recalled that sometime ago a copy of the
draft legislation had been sought but the request was turned down on grounds that the issue was ‘secret and sensitive’.
“The Supreme Court of Pakistan and the Commission on En
forced Disappearances had also asked for legislation for regulation of affairs of intelligence a
gencies, but successive government have failed to deliver on that front,” he lamented.
Babar said tha
t last year in December the Senate had unanimously adopted half a dozen recommendations including the
draft legislation that sought oversight of Inter-Servic
es Intelligence (ISI) agency’s affairs. He said recommendations were included in the
draft to criminalise en
forced disappearances and to bring state a
gencies under the ambit of the law. The
draft also sought ratification of the Convention on En
forced Disappearances.
Babar reminded the Senate that it was also decided that in case the government failed to enact the proposed law it would be asked to explain itself to a bi-partisan oversight committee. If the oversight committee was not satisfied with the government’s response, leaders of all parliamentary parties will endorse the
draft law as a Private Member’s Bill, the senator said, referring to the decision taken last year by the Senate Committee of the Whole.
Babar said the government had failed to respond to the Senate within the stipulated period of 60 days. “It’s now the responsibility of leaders of the parliamentary parties to get the
draft bill passed as a Private member’s Bill,” he said.
“Parties whose leaders fail to sign the bill now will stand exposed before the people of Pakistan. The public will also find out about forces that create hurdles in the passage of the bill at any stage,” Babar noted.
Censuring parliamentary political parties, Babar said they had not taken the bull by the horns in the matter concerning criminalisation of en
forced disappearances and regulation of state a
gencies.
He lamented that because of the absence of legislation not a single perpetrator of the crime of en
forced disappearance had been held accountable in the country.
During his speech, Babar also criticised the government for different standards in measuring compensation for victims of terrorist attacks and other tragedies in different regions of the country. He said the government was giving out an impression that lives of those living in provinces other than Punjab were less worthy. “The body of a victim fetches Rs2 million in Punjab, Rs1 million in Sindh, half a million in Balochistan and only Rs200,000 in Tribal Areas,” he said, warning that such actions could be detrimental to the health of the federation.
Published in Daily Times, July 19th , 2017.