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The
Pakistani military high-command is going ahead with its ambitious
plan of shifting the Army General Headquarters from Rawalpindi to
Islamabad, despite widespread criticism from opposition circles,
who maintain that the country's security or inter-services' coordination
are unlikely to benefit by moving the GHQ 20 kilometres away from
its present location.
The
GHQ is moving from the garrison town of Rawalpindi to a sprawling
Pentagon-style headquarters in Islamabad. Scheduled to be completed
by September 2007, the GHQ Headquarters is being set up in E-10
and E-11 sectors, considered to be the most expensive and exclusive
urban real estate in the country, worth billions of rupees. Sprawling
over more than 1400 acres of land, the GHQ complex will house the
Ministry of Defence, the Army Headquarters, the office of Chairman
Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee, hundreds of residences for army
officers and generals and a huge golf course.
The
Capital Development Authority was made to give 1400 acres at the
foot of the Margalla hills at a throwaway price of 180 rupees per
square yard, as against the market rate of 110,000 rupees to 120,000
rupees per square yard. The construction of the new GHQ Complex
started on September 6, 2004, when General Pervez Musharraf laid
the foundation stone, saying the relocation of the headquarters
of all three services at one place would ensure an efficient and
smooth working environment, leading to better planning at all tiers
of the armed forces.
Critics
of the move, however, recall that it was actually the Hamood-ur-Rehman
Commission report that had recommended that the three service headquarters
should be in one place at a time when communication technology was
in its infancy. However, 35 years down the road, with the advent
of IT, the move seems wasteful and unnecessary and will turn Islamabad
into an army cantonment. Though the army is allegedly acquiring
hundreds of acres of land ostensibly for the GHQ shift, critics
maintain the real purpose was to dish out plots to the men-in-khaki
at dirt cheap prices.
Opposition
circles in Islamabad are demanding a review of the decision to construct
the new GHQ in the federal capital on prime real estate. The ambitious
GHQ project has already come under sharp criticism by civilians
after the army's recent demand for the provision of an additional
315 acres at a similar throwaway price, which would cause the CDA
a staggering loss of billions of rupees, besides causing the dislocation
of around 3,500 families living in Chauntra village. Reliable sources
say in addition to the 1,400 acres already allotted for the GHQ
Complex, the CDA was made to transfer another 870 acres at a stingy
200 rupees per square yard in November 2004, though the market rate
of land in adjacent sectors is at least 120,000 rupees per square
yard.
The additional land was allotted to the GHQ despite some
serious objections raised by the opposition parties. Two PPP senators,
Farhatullah Babar and Enver Baig, submitted an adjournment motion
in the Senate on November 29, 2004 against the move, stating that
the additional land was being sold at 200 rupees per square yard
against the market value of over 110,000 rupees per square yard.
They further stated that the market rate of 870 acres is 505.296
billion rupees, while it was being provided to the military authorities
for just 842 million rupees, causing a 500 billion rupee loss to
the CDA. The motion added: "The land falls in the area of the
national park zone-III, which under the master plan cannot be sold
or purchased or used for construction purposes." The two senators
were of the view that any construction in the national park zone
would damage the environment. They also maintained that the CDA
land, being public property, could not be sold in a manner which
caused such a colossal loss to the state.
The
Pakistan Muslim League Chief Coordinator and former Deputy Chairman
Planning Commission, Ahsan Iqbal, claims that the additional land
is being acquired to construct a massive golf course and hundreds
of palatial houses for the army generals. He feels that if the GHQ
Complex is to be built at all, it should be built on the land originally
ear-marked for the project. Otherwise, according to Iqbal, an army
command structure in the heart of the federal capital would make
the city a prime military target and put the civilian population
at great risk. "The General Headquarters should remain at its
present location and only if there is a compelling need for constructing
a new GHQ on the pattern of the Malaysian Putrajaya, should it be
constructed on either the Islamabad-Lahore motorway, or some other
suitable location away from the federal capital. Establishing an
army complex in the heart of Islamabad, will destroy its civil character
and turn it into a cantonment," says Ahsan Iqbal.
However, refuting the apprehensions expressed by the PML-N leader,
Director General Inter Services Public Relations, Major General
Shaukat Sultan, claimed that all expenses for the construction of
the new GHQ are being incurred by the Pakistan Army from its own
resources. He said the perception that the GHQ project would cause
a 500 billion rupee loss to the CDA was incorrect. "The property
owned by the army in Rawalpindi and other cities is being sold to
generate finances for the construction of the GHQ Complex."
He refuted reports that the shifting of GHQ was decided after the
assassination attempts on General Musharraf.
According
to GHQ sources, it was former Prime Minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto
who had actually decided to shift the GHQ Headquarters to Islamabad[
in a cabinet meeting on March 29, 1972]. The shifting of the GHQ
to Islamabad was first discussed after the 1965 Indo-Pak war, during
which proper communication could not be established between the
three services - the army, the navy and the air force - especially
during Indian attacks. Therefore, it was decided to relocate the
headquarters of the three military services to Islamabad. The Pakistan
Navy was given top priority as it had to shift from Karachi, followed
by the Pakistan Air Force that had to move from Peshawar. The GHQ
delayed its shifting due to the enormous cost involved.
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