The bills to extend the retirement age from 60 to 64 years for the chiefs of army, navy and air force, and the chairman of the joint chief of staff committee sailed through the Senate.
International
News : The bills giving three years extension to General
Qamar Bajwa as army chief was "rushed" through parliament
without debate, a group of dissident Pakistanis said.
The
bills to extend the retirement age from 60 to 64 years for the chiefs
of army, navy and air
force, and the chairman of the joint chief of staff committee
sailed through the Senate or the upper house despite protests from
minor parties, Geo News said.
Under
the banner of the South Asians Against Terrorism and For Human Rights
(SAATH) Forum, the group on Wednesday voiced concern at the manner in
which the Pakistan government and main opposition parties “rushed
through parliament” amendments to the Army Act.
The
bills were passed “without debate as to the desirability or
necessity of such legislation, and without due consideration to the
implications of such an action on the future of democracy in
Pakistan”, the group that includes former journalists and envoys
said in a statement.
Senate
chairman Sadiq Sanjrani adjourned the session as soon as the bills
were passed. The Senate session lasted only 20 minutes and no other
agenda other than the laying of a few reports was taken up, the Dawn
said. The bills were already approved by the Standing Committee on
Defence.
“It
is a fact of history that the desire to perpetuate personal power,
army chiefs of Pakistan have time and again disrupted the democratic
project in Pakistan.
"While
in the past the military has carried out coups, and its chiefs have
extended their tenures themselves by force, and while one example
also exists where the president of Pakistan extended the tenure of an
army chief under duress, there is no example of parliament
undertaking such an adventure,” it said.
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