Senate passes Zainab alert bill for child protection

This file photo shows a general view of Parliament House building in Islamabad on April 27, 2018. (AFP)
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Updated 05 March 2020
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Senate passes Zainab alert bill for child protection

  • The bill is named after a six-year-old girl from Kasur who was abducted, raped and killed in 2018
  • It hopes to raise the required alerts in missing children’s cases and bring them back to safety as soon as possible

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Senate on Wednesday passed the Zainab Alert, Recovery and Response Bill, 2020, to react to the abduction of children more quickly and bring them back to safety as soon as possible.

The country’s minister for parliamentary affairs, Azam Khan Swati, moved a motion under Rule 263 for the immediate consideration of the bill by dispensing the rules.

The bill is named after Zainab Ansari, a six-year-old girl, who was abducted in Kasur in January 2018 and brutally raped and killed by a man in her town.

The House passed the bill after a brief discussion to ensure that all cases involving the kidnapping, rape and murder of minor children would be investigated in three months.

The bill also seeks to raise the required alerts and initiate the responses required for the recovery of missing, abducted, abused or kidnapped children in Islamabad Capital Territory (ICT).

It will ensure the harmonization and cohesion in the workings of the new agencies and institutions established for the protection of children.

According to the bill, the maximum sentence handed down to perpetrators of child sexual abuse will be life imprisonment with a fine of Rs1 million while the minimum sentence will be 10 years.

It also seeks to establish Zainab Alert, Response and Recovery Agency (ZARRA) that is headed by a director general who is appointed by the prime minister in keeping with the prescribed rules.

The bill requires that the management of ZARRA be suitably equipped with skills of managing databases, conducting planning and monitoring of programs, analyzing data, preparing reports and coordinating with all other officers.

ZARRA will also work closely with the 1099 helpline or such other helplines operating under the mandate of the division concerned.

The local police and concerned law enforcement agencies will take immediate action and launch investigation, search, rescue and recovery operations after receiving information about a relevant case.

If required, ZARRA will also coordinate the efforts of the concerned police stations and other federal and provincial agencies, authorities or departments.


Pakistan kills 11 militants in separate operations in western provinces

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Pakistan kills 11 militants in separate operations in western provinces

  • Military says five Baloch separatist fighters were killed in an intelligence-based operation in Kohlu district
  • Police say six Pakistani Taliban died in Lakki Marwat during a joint operation after drone attacks on homes

ISLAMABAD/PESHAWAR: Pakistani security forces and police killed at least 11 militants in separate counterterrorism operations in the country’s western provinces of Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, authorities said on Friday, highlighting the distinct insurgencies confronting the country along its border with Afghanistan.

In southwestern Balochistan, the military said it killed separatist militants in an intelligence-based operation in Kohlu District on Dec. 25, while police in the northwestern district of Lakki Marwat fought and killed the Pakistani Taliban.

Pakistan’s military said the Balochistan operation targeted fighters it identified as part of “Fitna al Hindustan,” a term authorities use for Baloch separatist outfits, including the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA), which have waged a decades-long insurgency in the resource-rich province.

“During the conduct of operation, own forces effectively engaged the terrorists’ location, and after an intense fire exchange, five Indian sponsored terrorists were sent to hell,” the military’s media wing, Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), said in a statement, adding that weapons and explosives were recovered and follow-up clearance operations were underway.

In Lakki Marwat, police said counterterrorism units and local peace committees launched a coordinated operation against militants they described as “khwarij,” a term the Pakistani state uses for factions aligned with the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), an umbrella group of militants that primarily operates in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

According to police, six militants were killed and several others wounded during the operation, after authorities said militants had used drone-mounted devices to target residential homes, injuring civilians.

“Protection of life and property of the public is the police’s top priority, and strict, indiscriminate action against khwarij and other anti-peace elements will continue,” Bannu Region Deputy Inspector General Sajjad Khan said in a statement released by the regional police office.

The two operations highlight Pakistan’s parallel security challenges in its western regions.

In Balochistan, separatist groups accuse the federal government and military of marginalizing ethnic Baloch communities and denying them a fair share of the province’s mineral wealth, allegations Islamabad denies.

In Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, the TTP has intensified attacks on security forces and civilians since the Afghan Taliban’s return to power in Kabul in 2021.

Pakistan has repeatedly said these militant groups operating in both provinces receive backing from India and find shelter in Afghanistan, claims denied by New Delhi and Kabul.

Pakistani authorities said counterterrorism operations will continue nationwide under a campaign approved by the federal government to curb militancy and restore security.