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Today's Paper | November 21, 2024

Updated 02 Jul, 2014 08:19pm

Protection of Pakistan Bill 2014 approved in NA

ISLAMABAD: The National Assembly on Wednesday passed the Protection of Pakistan Bill 2014 which permits security forces to shoot suspects on sight with the permission of a grade-15 official.

The religio-political parties including Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam - Fazl and Jamaat-i-Islami opposed the bill in the National Assembly.

Minister for Science and Technology Zahid Hamid moved the bill in the National Assembly on behalf of Minister for Interior Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan.

The Protection of Pakistan Bill which seeks “to provide for protection against waging of war against Pakistan and the prevention of acts threatening the security of Pakistan” will provide the law enforcers with additional powers.

Zahid Hamid told the National Assembly that the government has taken on board all the leaders of parliamentary parties in order to get their recommendations regarding the bill.

He said that the government had already included the recommendations of the opposition parties before passing the bill from the Upper House.

Hamid also appreciated the role of parliamentary leaders from all the political parties in the parliament who gave their suggestions in this regard.

The Minister said that the Senate had already passed the bill on Monday while it is very necessary to pass the bill in the National assembly as well to counter the activities of terrorists across the country.

“It will send a message that the government stands with the military in the operation against terrorists in FATA,” he said.

Later, Muttahida Qaumi Movement leader Farooq Sattar said that the Pakistan Protection Ordinance (PPO) was necessary for national security, adding that his party leadership believes in the presence of a strict law to counter terrorism across the country.

He said that there were concerns from Opposition on the PPO but the government tried to remove them before its approval from the Senate.

Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) Leader Shah Mehmood Qureshi said that his party leadership has concerns regarding the PPO but the PTI supports the security forces at all cost.

“The interior minister did not give any importance to the National Assembly while it was necessary that he should be present in the National Assembly to move the bill today,” he added.


Salient features of the Protection of Pakistan Bill 2014:


It defines “enemy alien” as “a militant” whose identity “is unascertainable as a Pakistani, in the locality where he has been arrested or in the locality where he claims to be residing, whether by documentary or oral evidence; or who has been deprived of his citizenship by naturalisation”.

The bill defines “militant” as “any person who wages war or insurrection against Pakistan, or raises arms against Pakistan, its citizens, the armed forces or civil armed forces; or takes up advocates or encourages or aids or abets the raising of arms or waging of war or a violent struggle against Pakistan; or threatens or acts or attempts to act in a manner prejudicial to the security, integrity or defence of Pakistan; or commits or threatens to commit any scheduled offence; and includes; a person who commits any act outside the territory of Pakistan for which he has used the soil of Pakistan for preparing to commit such act that constitutes scheduled offence under this act”.

“Any person against whom there are reasonable grounds that he acts under the directions or in concert or conspiracy with or in furtherance of the designs of an enemy alien” will also be treated as a militant.

The law has given the powers to law-enforcement agencies to “enter and search, without warrant any premises to make any arrest of to take possession of any firearm, explosive weapon, vehicle, instrument or article used, or likely to be used and capable of being used, in the commission of any scheduled offence”.

However, it says that “after the search, the circumstances justifying it and the items recovered shall be reported within two days to special judicial magistrate of the area by the officer conducting the search”.

According to the law, the order to shoot a person on suspicion will come only from an official of a law-enforcement agency or a police officer of grade-15 or above. Moreover, it binds the government to order a judicial inquiry, if any law-enforcement agency official opens fire on suspected terrorists.

Under the law, convicted persons will have the right to appeal before a high court against their convictions. Earlier, a convicted person had only the right to appeal before the Supreme Court.

A clause in the bill says: “The government, joint investigation team, armed forces or civil armed forces may, in the interest of the security of their personnel or for the safety of the detainee or accused or intern, as the case may be, or for any other reasonable cause withhold the information except from a high court or the Supreme Court regarding the location of the detainee or accused or intern or internment centre established or information with respect to any detainee or accused or interne or his whereabouts; provided that the judge or judges to whom the disclosure is made may decide to treat it as privileged information in the public interest; and the government may not in the interest of the security of Pakistan disclose the grounds for detention or divulge any information relating to a detainee, accused or interne who is an enemy alien or a militant.”

It further says: “Any person apprehended in the course of preparation, attempt or commission of a scheduled offence and from whom any weapon, material, vehicle, article or instrument designed for or capable of being used to commit or to facilitate the commission of the offence of bombing, suicide bombing or target killing or grievous hurt shall be presumed to be guilty of preparation, attempt or commission, as the case may be, of a scheduled offence.”

Giving “explanation”, the law states: “A cellphone or other instrument that contains logs or evidence of calls or messages made or received that facilitate the preparation, attempt or commission of such an offence, shall be deemed to be such an instrument and any record thereon or therein shall be admissible in evidence.”

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