The bill seeks to protect children from corporal punishment by any individual in the workplace, in educational institutions, and in religious public and private child care institutions and rehabilitation centers, as well as in the juvenile justice system Has been
In addition to the two guests invited by the standing committee for their views on religion, the entire committee approved the bill.
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Read more: National Assembly passes bill banning corporal punishment of children
PML-N Senator Prof Sajid Mir, who was invited to speak on the issue from a religious perspective, gave the example from the hadith that teachers should not go ahead to ensure discipline.
Professor Sajid Mir said that corporal punishment should not be abolished completely, however, he also claimed that the punishments proposed in the proposed bill were not compatible with the crimes.
Similarly, Senator Kamran Murtaza of Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam Pakistan also argued that some austerity was necessary.
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