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جمعرات، 29 جولائی، 2010

Pakistan rejects British criticism

Prime Minister Syed Yusuf Raza Gilani on Thursday said his government will take up the issue of British PM’s remarks against Pakistan’s sincerity in war on terror with the Britain at diplomatic channels.

David Cameron who is on his first official visit to India said Wednesday that Pakistan should not be allowed "to promote the export of terror" in the world.

Criticizing the United Kingdom prime minister's statement against Pakistan while being in India, the prime minister said the combined forces of NATO could not bring peace in Afghanistan and the sacrifices rendered by them are far lesser than those of Pakistan's armed forces personnel.

"They should assist for capacity building of our law enforcement agencies. Such a criticism would cast negative impact on war on terror," said the prime minister.

Gilani told Senate that the government would shortly devise a national policy on terrorism after consultation with all political forces.

"We will do our homework first. We will meet political leaders separately to make the policy of national level," the prime minister told the House responding to the points raised Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz member Raja Zafarul Haq.

He said PML-N leader Mian Nawaz Sharif had also discussed incidents of terrorism in Balochistan, Khyber Pukhtoonkhwa and target killings in Karachi and suggested national conference to devise a strategy for country's deliverance from this menace.

"This is not sole responsibility of a single party or the government. This is for the country. Terrorism is hitting national economy, besides other losses to society and infrastructure," Gilani said.

Earlier, Raja Zafarul Haq stressed the need for national strategy to counter terrorism and added that terrorism policy should be reviewed.
David Cameron has sparked a furious diplomatic row with Islamabad after accusing elements of the Pakistani state of promoting the export of terrorism, reports the Guardian.

In the strongest British criticism of Pakistan so far, the Prime Minister warned Islamabad it could no longer “look both ways” by tolerating terrorism while demanding respect as a democracy.

But in an angry response, Pakistan’s High Commissioner to Britain accused Cameron of damaging the prospects for regional peace, and criticised him for believing allegations in the Wikileaks documents.



“There seems to be more reliance on information based on intelligence leaks which lack credibility of proof. A bilateral visit aimed at earning business could have been done without damaging the prospects of regional peace.”

The Prime Minister initiated the row in a speech to Indian business leaders in Bangalore, when he spoke of his horror at the 2008 terrorist attacks in Mumbai. Delhi directly blamed the Pakistani authorities for the attacks.

Cameron came close to endorsing Delhi’s view when he said, “We cannot tolerate in any sense the idea that this country is allowed to look both ways and is able to promote the export of terror, whether to India or Afghanistan or anywhere else in the world.

Pakistan took the rare step of issuing a rebuttal. Abdul Basit, a spokesman for the Pakistani foreign ministry, told Radio 4’s World at One: “There is no question of Pakistan looking the other way. I think the Prime Minister was referring to these reports, which are unverifiable and outdated. If we start drawing inferences from these self-serving reports, then obviously we are distracting ourselves.”

Pakistani Senator Khurshid Ahmad, Islamist Jamaat-e-Islami party, said: “I am deeply concerned. The basis on which this statement has been made is very fragile. The documents released are unreliable: 90% of them have been attributed to Afghan intelligence agencies, whose reports are totally unreliable and fabricated. On the basis of such a reports, it is not acceptable to make the statement that has been made.”

Britain has spoken in the past of the terror threat from Pakistan, though ministers have restricted themselves to criticising Pakistan for tolerating terror groups. But the Prime Minister’s language came close to endorsing the Indian view that authorities in Pakistan have a hand in the terror.

Cameron named several terror groups which are, according to India, sponsored by Pakistan. “We like you are determined that groups like the Taliban, the Haqqani network or Lakshar-e-Taiba should not be allowed to launch attacks on Indian and British citizens in India or in Britain.”

Downing Street insisted that the Prime Minister was not accusing the Pakistan government of sponsoring terrorism. But a few minutes after his speech, Cameron made clear that official agencies in Pakistan were some way culpable.

Asked whether Pakistan exported terrorism, Cameron said, “I choose my words very carefully. It is unacceptable for anything to happen within Pakistan that is about supporting terrorism elsewhere. It is well-documented that that has been the case in the past, and we have to make sure that the Pakistan authorities are not looking two ways. They must only look one way, and that is to a democratic and stable Pakistan.”

Cameron confirmed in his speech that he had discussed the terror threat from Pakistan with Barack Obama and officials at the Pentagon last week. The PM’s remarks indicate that he and Obama discussed one of the key issues at the heart of the leaked intelligence documents days before their publication in Monday’s Guardian.

The Prime Minister’s words on Pakistan overshadowed the first day of a visit to India designed to herald a new special relationship. Downing Street says the trip is meant to show that Britain can treat India as a normal trading partner, with the security issues surrounding Delhi’s troubled relations with Pakistan dealt with on a separate tack.

But the main business announcement – a relaxation of licence rules to allow the export of civil nuclear technology and expertise to India had the potential to upset its nuclear neighbour. Pakistan and India have both refused to sign the nuclear non-proliferation treaty, prompting the last government to refuse to offer co-operation to India on civil nuclear power. British ministers had feared there would be leakage to its military nuclear programme.

The US sanctioned the use of civil nuclear technology to India in 2008. Britain believes yesterday’s agreement is compatible with the NPT, which bans the sale of nuclear technology to nuclear powers that have not signed it. The Nuclear Suppliers’ Group, of which Britain and the US are members, granted India a waiver that allows the transfer of technology.

Vince Cable, the business secretary who has championed the change, said, “There are obvious security sensitivities. We are conscious of those, as are the Indians. But within those constraints we really want to push ahead with civil nuclear co-operation. That would be quite a big sector within which we could really make progress.”The leaked documents claim that the ISI, Pakistan’s intelligence agency, is still encouraging the Taliban.

Wajid Shamsul Hasan, Pakistan’s High Commissioner said, “one would have wished that the Prime Minister would have considered Pakistan’s enormous role in the war on terror and the sacrifices it has rendered since 9/11.

“There seems to be more reliance on information based on intelligence leaks which lack credibility of proof. A bilateral visit aimed at earning business could have been done without damaging the prospects of regional peace.”

The Prime Minister initiated the row in a speech to Indian business leaders in Bangalore, when he spoke of his horror at the 2008 terrorist attacks in Mumbai. Delhi directly blamed the Pakistani authorities for the attacks.

Cameron came close to endorsing Delhi’s view when he said, “We cannot tolerate in any sense the idea that this country is allowed to look both ways and is able to promote the export of terror, whether to India or Afghanistan or anywhere else in the world.

Pakistan took the rare step of issuing a rebuttal. Abdul Basit, a spokesman for the Pakistani foreign ministry, told Radio 4’s World at One: “There is no question of Pakistan looking the other way. I think the Prime Minister was referring to these reports, which are unverifiable and outdated. If we start drawing inferences from these self-serving reports, then obviously we are distracting ourselves.”

Pakistani Senator Khurshid Ahmad, Islamist Jamaat-e-Islami party, said: “I am deeply concerned. The basis on which this statement has been made is very fragile. The documents released are unreliable: 90% of them have been attributed to Afghan intelligence agencies, whose reports are totally unreliable and fabricated. On the basis of such a reports, it is not acceptable to make the statement that has been made.”

Britain has spoken in the past of the terror threat from Pakistan, though ministers have restricted themselves to criticising Pakistan for tolerating terror groups. But the Prime Minister’s language came close to endorsing the Indian view that authorities in Pakistan have a hand in the terror.

Cameron named several terror groups which are, according to India, sponsored by Pakistan. “We like you are determined that groups like the Taliban, the Haqqani network or Lakshar-e-Taiba should not be allowed to launch attacks on Indian and British citizens in India or in Britain.”

Downing Street insisted that the Prime Minister was not accusing the Pakistan government of sponsoring terrorism. But a few minutes after his speech, Cameron made clear that official agencies in Pakistan were some way culpable.

Asked whether Pakistan exported terrorism, Cameron said, “I choose my words very carefully. It is unacceptable for anything to happen within Pakistan that is about supporting terrorism elsewhere. It is well-documented that that has been the case in the past, and we have to make sure that the Pakistan authorities are not looking two ways. They must only look one way, and that is to a democratic and stable Pakistan.”

Cameron confirmed in his speech that he had discussed the terror threat from Pakistan with Barack Obama and officials at the Pentagon last week. The PM’s remarks indicate that he and Obama discussed one of the key issues at the heart of the leaked intelligence documents days before their publication in Monday’s Guardian.

The Prime Minister’s words on Pakistan overshadowed the first day of a visit to India designed to herald a new special relationship. Downing Street says the trip is meant to show that Britain can treat India as a normal trading partner, with the security issues surrounding Delhi’s troubled relations with Pakistan dealt with on a separate tack.

But the main business announcement – a relaxation of licence rules to allow the export of civil nuclear technology and expertise to India had the potential to upset its nuclear neighbour. Pakistan and India have both refused to sign the nuclear non-proliferation treaty, prompting the last government to refuse to offer co-operation to India on civil nuclear power. British ministers had feared there would be leakage to its military nuclear programme.

The US sanctioned the use of civil nuclear technology to India in 2008. Britain believes yesterday’s agreement is compatible with the NPT, which bans the sale of nuclear technology to nuclear powers that have not signed it. The Nuclear Suppliers’ Group, of which Britain and the US are members, granted India a waiver that allows the transfer of technology.

Vince Cable, the business secretary who has championed the change, said, “There are obvious security sensitivities. We are conscious of those, as are the Indians. But within those constraints we really want to push ahead with civil nuclear co-operation. That would be quite a big sector within which we could really make progress.”

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