AAMIR SAEED

ISLAMABAD: The Senate Tuesday passed ‘The Gas Infrastructure Development Cess (amendment) Bill 2018’ with a majority vote to collect Rs12 billion from CNG stations that is half of the cess payable to the government by them.

State Minister for Finance Rana Afzal Khan presented the bill in the House while members of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf and Muttahida Qaumi Movement-Pakistan opposed it and also staged a token walkout.

The minister said the CNG stations through All Pakistan CNG Association have agreed with the government to pay approximately half of the cess payable pertaining to the period from January 2012 to May 2015 amounting to Rs12 billion.

He said that hundreds of court cases pertaining to the matter are already pending with different courts but now the CNG sector has come up with a plausible solution of the matter.

PTI Senator Azam Swati, however, said the CNG stations had collected Rs62 billion from consumers while they agreed to pay a meagre Rs12 billion to the government.

He along with other members requested the chair either to defer the bill or send it back to a relevant standing committee for review as he alleged that some owners of CNG stations were lobbying the lawmakers to get the bill passed.

The state minister for finance admitted that people linked to the CNG sector were lobbying for the passage of the bill because they think the government should give them an incentive before expiry of its term.

He, however, expressed his ignorance about involvement of any corruption in the matter and suggested Deputy Chairman Senate Saleem Mandviwalla to send the matter to National Accountability of Bureau (NAB) for investigation if there is a matter of any corruption in it.

When the bill was put to vote, 25 senators voted in its favor and 16 members opposed it.

The House also passed a bill to prevent and combat trafficking in persons especially of women and children. Minister of State for Interior Talal Chaudhry presented the bill, saying that it is important to get this bill passed to fulfill some ‘international obligations.’

Explaining importance of the bill to the members, PML-N Senator Mushahid Hussain Sayed said that effective prevention of human trafficking is one of the criteria under which the countries are being judged by the United Nations and some other organizations like the Financial Action Task Force (FATF).

“Human trafficking is one of the markers on which countries are being judged by the international organizations and Pakistan wants to fulfill the requirement through this law,” he added.

“Any person who commits an offence of trafficking in persons shall be punished with imprisonment which may extend to seven years or with fine which may extend to one million rupees or with both,” the bill read.

“If the offence of trafficking is committed against a child or a woman, the person who commits the offence shall be punished with imprisonment which may extend to 10 years and which shall not be less than two years or with fine which may extend to one million rupees or with both,” it said.

The House also passed a resolution unanimously to condemn Israeli forces for their atrocities against innocent and defenceless people of Palestine, resulting in death of 70 children, women and men.

“The Senate rejects the US decision to move American Embassy to Jerusalem, since it is a violation of international law and the United Nations Charter, which has sparked the popular uprising,” the resolution said.

Responding to a calling attention notice regarding recent increase in thumb impressions verification fee by National Database and Registration Authority, Talal Chaudhry said the thumb impression verification fee has been increased from Rs10 to Rs25 per vote.

The minister informed the House that votes of 40 constituencies were sent to NADRA for thumb verification and the authority’s expenditure on per vote verification is almost double the fee collected from the applicant.

He said the NADRA is already spending a lot of money on election related things, so the fee for thumb verification cannot be reduced to the previous level.

Mover of the calling attention notice, Senator Azam Khan Swati, however, said that he is not satisfied with the minister’s response and would continue pressing this issue of public importance.

Swati also pointed out that Election Commission of Pakistan has recently rejected nomination of Additional Secretary Finance Mujtaba Memon for board of directors of National Security Printing Company as he is a Canadian citizen.

The secretary finance has again sent the summary for nomination of Mujtaba Memon, he said, seeking intervention of the deputy chairman to unearth hidden hands behind the move.

Swati said this is a critical time as general elections are around the corner and induction of Mujtaba Memon at the moment should be stopped.

Deputy Chairman Senate Saleem Mandviwalla assured the member to seek details on it from secretary finance and if something wrong is found in it, “we won’t allow it to happen.”