Home »General News » Pakistan » Government seems to be indecisive about military courts: JI chief

  • News Desk
  • Feb 27th, 2017
  • Comments Off on Government seems to be indecisive about military courts: JI chief
Chief of Jamaat-e-Islami, Pakistan, Senator Sirajul Haq, has said that a national consensus was required for the revival of the military courts but the government itself seemed to be undecided on the issue so far. He was talking to the media at a reception hosted in his honour by ex-MPA Syed Ehsanullah Waqqas in the city on Sunday.

Sirajul Haq said that till now, the government had neither consulted the political parties on the issue nor taken them into confidence in this score.

He said the government should have taken necessary measures to streamline the civil judicial system and for the security of the judges and the courts and also overcome the weaknesses wherever. However, he said that nothing in this direction had been done during the last two years and the term of the military courts expired. He said if the government found itself in a difficult situation and had no other option, it should have taken the political parties into confidence and evolved national consensus.

Sirajul Haq said that a criminal was a criminal no matter he was educated at a college, or university a madrissah, or whether he was supporting a beard or not, and he must be treated a criminal. However, he said that harassing the Afghan refugees or the residents of the Pushtoon areas was not justified." We would appreciate if the government arrests a criminal from a Madrissah, a college or the one sitting in the corridors of powers", he said. He however added that wiping out ideological and economic terrorism was also essential to check armed terrorism.

Sirajul Haq said the JI would welcome any operation against the criminals but any such activity should not be used against religion, mosques and madrissahs or the Ulema. He said that if any operation was launched in the name of Islam, it was tantamount to endorsing the enemy agenda and in this case, the nation would believe that the rulers were advancing the enemy agenda.

"We want action against the criminals but Islam should not be made the target because this would be playing the enemy game" he added.

Sirajul Haq further said that considering all those coming from Afghanistan as an enemy and treating all of them alike was wrong. He said that saints like Syed Ali Hajveri and Lal Shahbaz Qalandar also came from Afghanistan and spread the message of Islam to millions of people here.



the author

Top
Close
Close