ISLAMABAD: National Assembly Speaker Asad Qaiser summoned a meeting of the Parliamentary Committee on National Security to discuss overall situation in the region including Afghanistan on July 31.
The sources divulged Monday that Speaker Qaiser called a meeting of the Parliamentary Committee on National Security on July 1 at 3pm to deliberate on the prevalent situation in the region including Afghanistan.
There is a strong indication that high military officials would attend the meeting, sources added.
Senate Chairman Sadiq Sinjarani, Opposition leader in National Assembly Shehbaz Sharif, PPP Chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari and other parliamentary leaders would be invited to the huddle on national security.
Besides them, the members of National Security Committee, members of National Assembly and Senators would also participate in the meeting.
Sources in the National Assembly said a consultation had already been made about the huddle and a formal notification regarding the summoning of the meeting will be issued after final discussion. Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi, Interior Minister Sheikh Rashid, Finance Minister Shaukat Tarin and PM Adviser on Parliamentary Affairs Babar Awan would attend the meeting.
Foreign Office on Monday rejected Kabul’s assertion that the outlawed Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) did not operate on Afghan soil.
“The assertions of the Afghan side are contrary to facts on ground and various reports of the United Nations, which also corroborate the presence and activities of over 5000-strong TTP in Afghanistan,” the FO spokesperson said.
A day earlier, the Afghanistan Ministry of Foreign Affairs had said that the TTP was neither founded in Afghanistan nor did it operate on its soil.
The statement was issued after Interior Minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed said that Islamabad is expecting the Afghan Taliban will not allow terrorists groups such as the TTP to carry out activities against Pakistan.
“This movement along with other terrorist groups is recognised as the enemy of peace, stability, and prosperity in Afghanistan and the region, and the Afghan government fights against this terrorist outfit like any other terrorist group without discrimination,” the Afghan foreign ministry had said.
It had also called on all countries, especially Pakistan, to “treat all terrorist outfits equally and without discrimination”.
In response to the statement, FO spokesperson Zahid Hafeez Chaudri said that over the last several years, the TTP has launched “gruesome terrorist attacks” inside Pakistan using Afghan soil without any retribution from its hosts.
“The 12th Report of the UN monitoring team issued in June 2021 acknowledges TTP’s ‘distinctive anti-Pakistan objectives’ and notes its location within Afghanistan ‘near the border with Pakistan’.
“The TTP following its orchestrated reunification with its splinter groups with the help of hostile intelligence agencies, its continued presence in Afghanistan with impunity and its cross-border attacks against Pakistan poses persistent threat to our security and stability,” he said.
Pakistan’s commitment to fighting terrorism in all its forms and manifestations, without any discrimination is unwavering and unambiguous, the FO spokesperson said.