Islamabad:The Imran Khan government in Pakistan is under intense criticism for facilitating legal remedies for alleged Indian spy Kulbhushan Jadhav, with the opposition parties slamming it for bringing in a 'National Reconciliation Ordinance'.
The session of the National Assembly saw a heated debate on the matter after Pakistan People Party (PPP) chief Bilawal Bhutto Zardari cited out quorum to prevent the government from laying down an ordinance pertaining to granting foreign citizens an opportunity to file a review appeal.
The Opposition blamed the government for trying to get a rubber stamp from the parliament on what it called 'facilitating a terrorist, who had confessed to his role in promoting unrest and terrorism in Pakistan'.
"A terrorist who has confessed to bringing involved in terrorism in our country, against whom we have completed legal proceedings - what has happened now that we are formally legislating to facilitate him?" asked Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) leader Khawaja Asif.
"When we (PML-N) were in the government, Kulbhushan was a slur used against us. It was said that Nawaz Sharif and PML-N were appeasing India. Who is appeasing India today?"
Lashing out at the Imran Khan government, Asif sought to remind them of the "taunts" the PML-N government faced from the then opposition party of Imran Khan. "We were taunted, now this government and this Prime Minister must tell us why he is stooping so low in front of India?" he said.
In its response, the government contended that the PML-N government should never have gone to the International Court of Justice in the first place. "From the first day, we had said that it was wrong of the then government to go to the ICJ and it was not just our party's stance, it was the PPP's as well," said Human Rights Minister Shireen Mazari.
"If one country does not accept the ICJ's jurisdiction, the case is not heard," she added.
Read more:Pak files petition in court for appointment of legal counsel for Jadhav: Report
While the cross-accusations over Jadhav's verdict review kept the parliament session heated, the Foreign Office defended the move of the government, asserting that the decision was pertinent to implement the verdict of the ICJ.