Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
International

Pak Army Expresses 'Serious Concern' Over News Leak About Rift With Government

Darpan News Desk IANS, 14 Oct, 2016 01:11 PM
    Pakistan Army top brass today expressed "serious concern" over a news leak about rift between civilian and military leaderships during a high-level meeting last week on how to deal with militancy, after which the reporter of the story was barred from leaving the country.
     
    Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Raheel Sharif presided over the meeting of Corps Commanders' Conference which was held at the General Headquarters in Rawalpindi.
     
    "Participants expressed their serious concern over feeding of false and fabricated story of an important security meeting held at the Prime Minister's House and viewed it as breach of national security," according a statement by the army.
     
    Pakistan's leading newspaper Dawn reported last week that there was a verbal clash between the civilian government and the military establishment over the military's covert support to militants like the Haqqani network, the LeT and Taliban.
     
     
     
    Following the report, journalist Cyril Almeida was put on Exit Control List (ECL), barring him from leaving Pakistan and sparking a massive outrage from journalist associations.
     
    The newspaper has rejected allegations of "vested interest and false reporting". It came out with a scathing editorial, saying Almeida's story on the verbal clash between government and military was "duly verified and correct piece of reporting."
     
    The Prime Minister's Office has repeatedly denied any rift between the two establishments since the story came out on October 6.
     
    The army said the participants in today's meeting held a comprehensive review of internal and external security situation with particular focus on the environment at the Line of Control (LoC) and operational preparedness of the army.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Nawaz Sharif's UN Speech Shows Pak Attachment to Terror, Says India

    Nawaz Sharif's UN Speech Shows Pak Attachment to Terror, Says India
    Extending his support to the "struggle of Kashmiri people", Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif said that peace and normalcy cannot be achieved between India and Pakistan without resolving the Kashmir issue.

    Nawaz Sharif's UN Speech Shows Pak Attachment to Terror, Says India

    Spa Week: Your Path to Wellness Starts Here

    Spa Week: Your Path to Wellness Starts Here
    Spa Week's October 17th-23rd Event allows millions to experience the revitalizing and relaxing benefits of spa treatments for just $50

    Spa Week: Your Path to Wellness Starts Here

    Suit Seeks Class Action To Halt B.C.'s 15% Tax On Foreign Purchasers

    Suit Seeks Class Action To Halt B.C.'s 15% Tax On Foreign Purchasers
    VANCOUVER — A legal challenge of a British Columbia levy on foreign home buyers has been filed in Vancouver, seeking a class-action lawsuit on behalf of those forced to pay the 15 per cent tax.

    Suit Seeks Class Action To Halt B.C.'s 15% Tax On Foreign Purchasers

    Indian Bar Owner Harinder Bains Helped Catch New York Bombing Suspect Ahmad Khan Rahami

    Indian Bar Owner Harinder Bains Helped Catch New York Bombing Suspect Ahmad Khan Rahami
    Harinder Bains saw Rahami sleeping in the doorway of his bar in New Jersey around 9 am on Monday, a hoodie pulled over his head.

    Indian Bar Owner Harinder Bains Helped Catch New York Bombing Suspect Ahmad Khan Rahami

    Prevent Terrorists From Using Pak Territory As Safe Havens, John Kerry Tells Nawaz Sharif

    Prevent Terrorists From Using Pak Territory As Safe Havens, John Kerry Tells Nawaz Sharif
    US Secretary of State John Kerry has asked Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to prevent terrorists from "using Pakistani territory as safe havens". He expressed concern over the violence in Kashmir particularly the terror attack on an Army base in Uri.

    Prevent Terrorists From Using Pak Territory As Safe Havens, John Kerry Tells Nawaz Sharif

    World's Youngest Programmer Is Only 7, Aims To Be Next 'Bill Gates'

    World's Youngest Programmer Is Only 7, Aims To Be Next 'Bill Gates'
    Muhammad Hamza Shahzad, resident of Handsworth area in Birmingham has been trained by his father Asim, who works with an American IT firm.

    World's Youngest Programmer Is Only 7, Aims To Be Next 'Bill Gates'