Achakzai requests opposition to end Senate sessions boycott

 Achakzai requests opposition to end Senate sessions boycott
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Summary The opposition members continue to boycott senate session for the ninth consecutive day on Thursday.

ISLAMABAD (Online) - In the wake of continuing political rivalry between opposition members and the government, Mehmood Khan Achakzai, head of the Balochistan-based and government-allied Pakhtunkhwa Milli Awami Party, met with opposition senators on Thursday and requested them to end their boycott of Senate sessions over an Oct 30 controversial reply submitted by Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan.

Opposition senators, mainly belonging to Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), have been protesting against what they call ‘arrogance’ shown by Chaudhry Nisar after allegedly providing wrong data to the house on Oct 30 about deaths in terrorism-related incidents.

After the interior minister, who counter-charged the opposition of making it a matter of ego, refused to withdraw his reply, arguing that the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa government had rechecked the figures of casualties from terrorist attacks from June onwards and found them correct, and there being no sign of a prime ministerial intervention, Speaker Sardar Ayaz Sadiq had ended the discussion by referring the issue to senior house member, Achakzai, for what he called “out-of-court settlement”.

Achakzai met with Leader of Opposition in the Senate Chaudhry Aitzaz Ahsan, Senators Raza Rabbani and Kamil Ali Agha . During the meeting, he urged the opposition senators to end their boycott of Senate sessions.

Separately, a meeting of all the coalition parties in the federal government was held in the Senate, led by Leader of the House Raja Zafarul Haq. The meeting was also attended by Chaudhry Nisar.

During the meeting, the members discussed the allegedly "unparliamentary behaviour" of the interior minister which had prompted opposition members to boycott Senate sessions.

Meanwhile, speaking to media representatives outside the Parliament House Nisar said if the opposition wants to create a “scene” outside the National Assembly, it could continue doing so.

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