Govt, army draw a line under Dawn probe saga:
ISLAMABAD: The standoff between the military and the civilian government over the recommendations issued in the wake of an inquiry into a Dawn story finally ended on Wednesday after the army’s spokesperson announced the decision to withdraw its controversial tweet.

Following
Maj Gen Ghafoor’s press conference, the interior ministry released a
statement, recounting the recommendations of the committee and
concluding that the issue had been “settled”.
•ISPR DG withdraws tweet rejecting PM Office notification •Announcement preceded by lengthy meeting between COAS, PM and aides •Interior ministry issues fresh statement, says the issue ‘stands settled’
The developments were preceded by a meeting between Chief of
the Army Staff Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa and Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif
earlier in the day. The lengthy conclave was also attended by
Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) Director General Lt Gen Naveed
Mukhtar, Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan and Finance Minister
Ishaq Dar.
“Recommendations, as contained in para 18 of
the inquiry committee report, duly approved by the prime minister, have
been implemented, which has settled the Dawn leaks issue. Accordingly,
the tweet of April 29 stands withdrawn,” the ISPR DG told reporters
during Wednesday’s briefing.
Defending himself against
criticism faced in the wake of the tweet, Maj Gen Ghafoor explained
that the tweet was not directed against any institution or individual.
He
said the military expected the notification to be in line with the
recommendations of the inquiry committee, but it was not, which prompted
the press release and tweet.
“What followed it was something regrettable,” he remarked.
Regretting
how society had become polarised over the issue — with some backing the
army and others calling for the DG ISPR’s resignation over
‘insubordination’ — Maj Gen Ghafoor said the interior ministry’s latest
order had filled in the gaps in the recommendations.
He
praised the government for removing the misunderstandings that had
prevailed over the past few weeks, adding that the army was a strong
institution that was committed to working with all institutions to serve
the best interests of the country.
“Pakistan Army
believes in democracy like all other Pakistanis and will continue to
work to strengthen democracy in the country while remaining [within the
ambit of] the Constitution,” he said.
Asked if the army
would demand further action against those responsible for the leak, he
said the prime minister was the final authority and his orders should be
implemented.
He avoided a volley of questions about the
alleged involvement of the prime minister’s daughter, Maryam Nawaz,
saying the committee had deliberated thoroughly and named all those
responsible, keeping all aspects in mind.
In an apparent
reference to criticism over his use of Twitter, he explained: “Tweets
[are] the fastest means of communication in today’s age; my tweets
should be treated as press releases.”
Interior ministry statement
The
statement issued by the Interior Ministry on Wednesday said: “Since
action on orders of the prime minister has already been completed by the
respective ministries and divisions, the issue of Dawn [leaks] stands
settled”.
There isn’t much that is new in the statement;
it reproduced the four recommendations of the inquiry committee on the
Dawn story, already contained more or less in the earlier notification
from the PM Office.
The only new part of the interior
ministry ‘notification’ was an endorsement of the removal of Senator
Pervaiz Rashid as minister for information.
On April 29,
the PM Office had issued directives to remove Tariq Fatemi, special
assistant to the prime minister on foreign affairs, from his post over
his alleged role in leaking information to Dawn.
The committee’s report — the contents of which have not been made public so far — also contained recommendations on the matter.
Action
had also been ordered against Rao Tehsin, the principal information
officer at the Ministry of Information “under the E&D Rules 1973” on
charges levelled against him.
The PM’s Office had also
recommended referring Dawn to the All Pakistan Newspapers Society (APNS)
for “necessary disciplinary action”, but did not say what the charges
against the Dawn Editor or Cyril Almeida — who wrote the story — would
be.
The APNS was asked to develop a code of conduct for
the print media, especially for stories that deal with “issues of
national importance and security”.
The language of the
statement suggested that the recommendations were in addition to the
committee’s recommendations in Para 18 of the inquiry report.
Political reaction
In
a series of messages from his Twitter accounts, Pakistan
Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) chief Imran Khan said the “issue was never [about]
army & government”, but rather “national security”.
“The
whole nation now needs to know what was ‘settled’,” he tweeted, saying
that the nation was being kept in the dark over how the matter of a
national security breach was resolved.
“Manner in which
[the] issue [was] resolved shows clearly there is one law for the
powerful and another law for the weak. [The] inquiry commission report
must be made public,” he concluded.
Senate Opposition
Leader Aitzaz Ahsan minced no words in his criticism of the decision,
saying that the DG ISPR should have resigned rather than withdrawing his
tweet. Speaking on a TV channel, PPP leader Saleem Mandviwala said the
issue would be raised in today’s (Thursday) Senate session as well.
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