Epaper – November 9 KHI 2021

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Tuesay, 9 November, 2021 I 3 Rabi-us-Sani, 1443 I Rs 15.00 I Vol XII No 131 I 12 Pages I Karachi Edition

Ceasefire agreed between govt and ttP: fawad M News Desk

INISTeR for Information and Broadcasting Chaudhry Fawad Hussain on Monday announced that a ‘complete ceasefire’ has been agreed between the government and the banned Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) after negotiations. “Under an agreement, the government of Pakistan and banned Tehreek-i-Taliban [Pakistan] have agreed upon complete ceasefire,” the minister told the media while referring to the interview of Prime Minister Imran Khan with a foreign television, in which he had hinted at these negotiations. He said the negotiations with the TTP are underway and would be carried out in accordance with the Constitution and law of the land. “Obviously, no government can hold such negotiation, which contravenes the Constitution and law of Pakistan.” In these negotiations, writ of the state, national security, peace of relevant areas and socio-economic stability would definitely be taken into account. The minister said that persons affected due to the TTP in different areas would not be ignored during the negotiations. Therefore, they are also being taken into confidence, he added. He said that ceasefire would be extendable in light of progress of negotiations. Authorities of Afghanistan’s interim government played the role of a facilitator in these talks, he added. Fawad said that certainly, it is welcoming to note that

Coronavirus in

Pakistan

CONFIRMED CASES:

1,277,160

LAST UPDATED AT 10:33 AM ON NOVEMBER 8, 2021

DAY'S DEATH TOLL:

NEW CASES:

9

449

RECOVERED:

DEATHS:

1,225,880 28,547 SINDH:

PUNJAB:

471,963

441,176

KPK:

BALOCHISTAN:

178,643 AJK/GB:

33,338 ISLAMABAD:

34,495/10,394

107,151

after a hiatus, complete peace would eventually return to those areas, which had been affected due to the TTP. Last month, Prime Minister Imran Khan had said that the government is in talks with some factions of the TTP that are looking at peace and reconciliation with the country. In an interview with TRT World in Islamabad, the premier had said that some of the groups actually want to talk to the government for reconciliation. When asked by the interviewer if the government is in talks with the TTP, the PM had said, “Yes, with some of them. There are different groups that form the TTP and some of them want to talk to our government for peace. So, we are in talks with them. It’s a reconciliation process.” When asked if the government is negotiating with some of those TTP groups to lay down their arms, the premier had responded, “Yes, and then we forgive them and they become normal citizens.” Meanwhile, Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) Chairman Bilawal BhuttoZardari said that policies drafted without taking parliament into confidence lack “legitimacy”. Speaking to the media after a high-level security briefing, Bilawal said that the government cannot take “unilateral decisions” when it comes to the country’s Afghanistan policy, talks with the TTP and agreements made with the Tehreek-i-Labbaik Pakistan. “No policy can be made [regarding] these issues without the approval of Parliament,” he said. “Any policies made without the approval of Parliament will lack legitimacy and will not be successful.”

Military briefing to lawmakers: ‘Pakistan will continue support for peace in afghanistan’ News Desk At a high-level security meeting held on Monday, lawmakers were told that Pakistan desired a government in Afghanistan that was representative of its people and would continue its “all-out support for peace and stability” in the war-torn country. At the Parliament House in Islamabad, the closed-door briefing was given during a meeting of the Parliamentary Committee on National Security (PCNS) by senior military officials to the parliamentary and political leadership, members of the National Assembly and Senate, provincial leadership andZ the Azad Kashmir prime minister. National Assembly Speaker Asad Qaiser chaired the meeting at 11:30am. The meeting lasted around five hours. The meeting had Army Chief Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa, Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) Director General Lt Gen Faiz Hameed, ISPR chief Maj Gen Babar Iftikhar and other senior military officers in attendance. However, Prime Minister Imran Khan was not amongst the attendees. “The participants were comprehensively briefed about matters pertaining to national security, foreign affairs, and internal and external challenges faced by the country. They were also briefed about regional and political challenges especially the situation in [Indian-occupied Kashmir] and Afghanistan,” a statement issued by the National Assembly Secretariat said after the meeting. During the meeting, it was outlined that Pakistan had played a “responsible and positive role” for peace in Afghanistan, and would continue its complete support for stability in the war-torn country. “Pakistan believes that peace in Afghanistan would pave [the way] for regional peace and development,” the NA press release stated. The meeting was also apprised about the border-control system installed on the Pakistan-Afghanistan border. According to the statement, the parliamentary and political leadership expressed satisfaction over Pakistan’s strategy to tackle internal and external challenges and expressed good wishes for the prosperity, development and progress of Afghanistan. “They also said that such meetings paved the way for harmony and unanimity of views on national issues,” it said. The participants were further informed that Pakistan was “making every effort to ensure that the current situation does not give rise to another humanitarian and economic crisis which would add to the plight of the people” and was in constant touch with the international community in this regard, it added. “It was also hoped that the territory of Afghanistan would not be used against Pakistan.” A question-and-answer session was held at the end of the meeting, in which members of the committee presented their recommendations. After the meeting, Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi while speaking to press said the ISI chief had given a “presentation” during the meeting, while the army chief answered questions from the lawmakers.

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TLP ends Wazirabad sit-in LAHORe Staff RepoRt

The activists of the Tehreek-iLabbaik Pakistan (TLP) party announced the ending of their sit-in on Monday, a day after the government lifted the ban on it following a deal with its leadership. The decision to revoke the ban was made after assurances from the group that it would abide by the law. Hundreds of detained supporters of the party were also released from detention as part of the deal, its members had been removed from the Fourth Schedule —a list on which suspects of terrorism and sectarianism are placed under the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997. The announcement to end the protest was made by a party leader, Syed Sarwar Shah, who called on the protestors to return to Masjid Rehmatallil Alameen in Lahore. “Mufti Muneeb ur-Rahman had given us the guarantee and told us to go back to Masjid Rehmatallil Alameen when 50 percent of our demands are met,” Shah told the participants. Initially, they had kept the GT Road blocked for three days before shifting to an adjacent park after the TLP struck a deal with

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PM directs to bring sugar stock out for sale in market STORY ON BACK PAGE

Global convergence on Afghanistan vital to avoid humanitarian crisis: COAS STORY ON BACK PAGE the government. “The government should now the rest of the agreement within the [promised] time,” the TLP spokesperson said. Adding to that he revealed that “The protesters will now move to Rehmatul Lil Alameen Mosque after the fulfilment of half of the demands [the government had committed to] in the agreement,” as had been guaranteed by the TLP leadership and Mufti Muneebur Rehman — who facilitated the negotiations between the two sides, a TLP spokesperson said on Monday. Rehman had also guaranteed that TLP chief Saad Rizvi will “attend the Urs [of Khadim

Hussain Rizvi’s first death anniversary] with us,” he said. “We will not go to our homes, we will go to Masjid Rehmatallil Alameen.” r, Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs Ali Muhammad Khan — who is heading a steering committee to oversee the implementation of the deal between the government and the TLP — dubbed the development “Pakistan’s win”. “The TLP dharna has peacefully dispersed from Wazirabad without any further unrest or losses. Negotiations and dialogue are key to the solution of many problems,” he tweeted.

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Shaukat Tarin urges people to pay taxes STORY ON PAGE 02

Sirajul Haq approaches SC, demands inquiry against those involved in Pandora leaks STORY ON PAGE 03


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