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Pak parliamentarians concerned about airspace violations by NATO | Pakistani parliamentarians have expressed serious concern about the violation of the country’s airspace near
the Afghan border by NATO allied forces based in Afghanistan. Pakistan Muslim
League-Nawaz (PML-N) leader Raja Zafar-ul-Haq criticized the role of the Pakistan
People’s Party ( PPP )-led government regarding the breach. “The government has
failed to defend the sovereignty of the country despite repeated airspace violations
by NATO forces,” the Daily Times quoted Zafar-ul-Haq, as saying. Jamiat Ulama-e-Islam-Fazl
(JUI-F) leader Abdul Ghafoor Haidri also expressed dismay over the government
and its strategic military policies towards NATO and the International Security
Assistance Force (ISAF). “If any agreement exists between NATO and Pakistan ,
then why does the government not produce it before the nation,” Haidri said. Meanwhile,
the leader of the Parliamentary Committee on Constitutional Reforms (PCCR), Raza
Rabbani, demanded from the House to summon NATO officials to appear in the Foreign
Office. Rabbani was also of the opinion that if NATO does not support the issue,
then Pakistan should use other options, including military retaliation. Earlier,
it was reported that despite assuring Pakistan of stopping further intrusions
into its territory, NATO aircraft had once again breached the country’s border
limits in Kurram Agency on Tuesday. The helicopters allegedly entered about 600
meters inside Pakistani airspace, and after flying in the area for 10 minutes
they returned back to Spin Boldak area in Afghanistan to their airbase. It came
weeks after three Pakistani army men were killed in an air strike by NATO helicopters
at a military post, 200 metres inside the Pakistani border in Kurram Agency. It
was NATO’s fourth aerial violation of Pakistani territory in less than a week,
but the first in which soldiers were killed. Reacting to the incident, Pakistan
had suspended supply convoys along the Khyber Pass route, which links Peshawar
in Pakistan with Jalalabad in eastern Afghanistan , and lodged a protest with
the NATO command in Brussels , demanding an apology. The cross-border air strikes,
seen by Pakistan as a violation of its territorial sovereignty, had sparked nationwide
rumblings over the US-led incursions.
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