Angry over govt's replies, opposition walks out of Senate.

ISLAMABAD -- The opposition in the Senate on Friday staged a walkout from the house as a mark of protest against 'government's unsatisfactory response' to questions related to the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) Authority.

The opposition questioned the status of the CPEC Authority and asked how could the organisation continue to function when the ordinance about it had lapsed.

During the question hour, queries were raised about the legal nature of the administrative and financial decisions taken by the authority so far.

In a written reply, the government said the CPEC Authority Ordinance lapsed in May 2020 and the CPEC Authority Bill was pending in the National Assembly. It said that all administrative and financial decisions of the authority were being taken according to the rules and regulations of the related ministries.

Federal Minister for Industries Hammad Azhar chided the opposition over 'its desire' to see an individual involved in the Broadsheet and Panama Papers cases as prime minister of the country.

Treasury members grilled over CPEC Authority; assault on provincial autonomy alleged

Members of the opposition parties termed the replies to their queries 'inadequate' and staged a walkout in protest.

The government also came under fire over what was termed 'an assault' on provincial autonomy.

Opposing the federal government's possible takeover of some hospitals in Sindh, Parliamentary Leader of the PPP in the Senate Sherry Rehman said: 'Sindh's National Institute of Cardiovascular Diseases, National Institute of Child Health and Jinnah Sindh Medical University are renowned all over Asia for their world-class care. People from all over the country go there for treatment because there are no other hospitals in the country that offer the same quality of care, but plans are being made by the federal government to take them over.'

She said employees of these hospitals were feeling that they would be treated the way those of the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences, Islamabad, were. 'This is completely illegal under the 18th amendment. Service delivery, which is with the province, cannot be taken over by the federal government. As it stands, the service delivery record of the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) in health and education is abysmal. You only need to see the state of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa institutions to understand that.'

Senator Rehman said Sindh was attracting doctors from the private sector by paying them handsome...

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