The Free Press Journal

PAKISTAN GOVT REVIVES PLAN TO SHIFT ARMY HQS TO ISLAMABAD

Defence Secretary Lt Gen (retd) Zamirul Hassan said that 2,450 acres of land has been allocated for building a defence complex

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The Pakistan government has revived plans to shift the General Headquarte­rs (GHQ) of the country's powerful Army from Rawalpindi to Islamabad and the military would provide Rs 100 billion for the ambitious project, according to a top defence official. Briefing the Senate Standing Committee on Defence on Thursday, Defence Secretary Lt Gen (retd) Zamirul Hassan said that 2,450 acres of land has been allocated for building a defence complex in Islamabad, the Express Tribune reported. He also said that for this purpose 5,000 families would be relocated to a different place. Hassan said the defence complex would be built at a cost of Rs 100 billion and the money would be provided by the Army, report PTI. The plan to relocate the GHQ had been under study since 1970. However, the plan was shelved around October 2008 to 2009, at the instructio­ns of then Army chief Gen Ashfaq Pervez Kayani, due to financial constraint­s. In 2009, six terrorists wearing Army uniforms launched a brazen assault on the General Headquarte­rs, sparking an hourlong battle. Pakistani troops repelled the assault. Six soldiers and four terrorists were killed during the fighting. The powerful Army, which enjoys considerab­le influence over policy decisions in Pakistan, has ruled the country for much of its life since it gained independen­ce 70 years ago. Briefing the panel on the eastern border, Lt Gen (retd) Hassan alleged that India has violated ceasefire along the Working Boundary and Line of Control 1,299 times in 2017. Speaking about the security of PakAfghan porous border, he said the two neighbours share 2,611-kilometre long border. "Pakistani military has 975 posts along the border, while Afghan security forces have only 218 posts," he said.

 ??  ?? Pakistani investigat­ive reporter Ahmed Noorani lies in a hospital bed after he was attack in the capital
Pakistani investigat­ive reporter Ahmed Noorani lies in a hospital bed after he was attack in the capital

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