Pakistan has pledged to raise the issue of executions of Jamaat-i-Islami (JI) leaders in Bangladesh at United Nations forums, including its Human Rights Council (UNHRC).
Adviser to the Prime Minister on Foreign Affairs Sartaj Aziz gave the details in this regard to the members of the Senate were given details in this regard.
Condemning the Bangladesh executions, Aziz asked Dhaka to reconsider its policy "not just in the interest of other Muslim countries, but also its own", reports the Express Tribune.
Aziz said that the hangings were "in sheer violation of a 1974 agreement between Pakistan, India and Bangladesh".
He urged the international community to take notice of human rights violation in Bangladesh.
Senators here praised Turkey for recalling its envoy from Bangladesh in protest and recommended that Pakistan should follow suit.
More From This Section
Paying tribute to the fallen political leaders, including Matiur Rehman Nizami, Senator Hashmi said that Nizami had served as a parliamentarian and minister in Bangladesh.
He highlighted that the tribunal headed by Sheikh Hasina had executed JI leaders whose "only crime was their loyalty to Pakistan and the two-nation theory".
"International organizations such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch had deemed the decision (to hang JI leaders) unacceptable," he said.