Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz supremo Nawaz Sharif’s meeting with Afghan National Security Adviser Hamdullah Mohib was expedited through an Arab country, Geo News reported on Sunday.
Crediting the facilitation of the meeting to some unnamed “Middle Eastern Muslim country,” it was reported that the planning of the meeting was done before the Afghan delegation arrived in London.
Moreover, it had been stated that a diplomat from the Arab country advised Nawaz to hold the meeting. They added that the Arab country that facilitated the meeting has “long-standing relations with Pakistan.”
Geo claimed that members within the Sharif family also confirmed that the former prime minister agreed to hold the meeting at the Arab country’s request.
Nawaz purportedly informed the Kabul government that the Pakistani people want peaceful ties with Afghanistan. Nawaz also told the Afghan officials Pakistan desires a peaceful, stable, and prosperous Pakistan.
The ministers of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf on Saturday criticised Nawaz Sharif for meeting the Afghan NSA.
The ministers said that the meeting has proved Nawaz’s connections with Pakistan’s enemies.
On Friday, Afghanistan’s National Security Council’s Twitter account had shared a picture of Mohib and Afghan State Minister for Peace Sayed Sadat Naderi meeting Nawaz in London to “discuss matters of mutual interest”.
Commenting on the meeting, Minister for Information and Broadcasting Fawad Chaudhry said: “This is why sending Nawaz Sharif abroad was dangerous because such people become a part of international plots. Nawaz’s meeting with “RAW’s (Indian intelligence agency — Research and Analysis Wing) biggest ally in Afghanistan is an example of this. Modi, Mohib or Amrullah Saleh (Afghan vice president) — every enemy of Pakistan is a close friend of Nawaz Sharif,” he tweeted.
Human Rights Minister Shireen Mazari said: “After Mohib referred to Pak — not PTI govt but [our] country — as a ‘brothel’, common RAW interest can only be to attack Pak,” she said, adding “such shameless self-interest of Sharif to preserve looted wealth & country be damned.”
State Minister Shehryar Afridi said: “Nawaz Sharif’s meeting with Afghan NSA proves his connections with Pakistan’s enemies.” The meeting has proved that the former prime minister is a “tool to be used against Pakistani interests”, he added.
Afridi further said that Nawaz’s statements have already been “used” by India at international forums.
Minister for Science and Technology Shibli Faraz termed the meeting as “nothing new”, saying Nawaz had “always kept company with enemies of Pakistan, be it (steel tycoon Sajjan) Jindal or Modi”.
Faraz said Mohib had called Pakistan a “brothel” in the past, adding that it was a “shame” that the former prime minister was so “insensitive” to the country’s self-respect.
Minister for Maritime Affairs Ali Haider Zaidi said Nawaz had “violated our stated policy of having no official contact with this despicable fool”.
Responding to the criticism, Maryam Nawaz said the foundation of Nawaz’s ideology was the peaceful coexistence of Pakistan with its neighbours and he had “worked tirelessly” for it.
“It is the very essence of diplomacy to talk to everyone, listen to their point of view and convey one’s own message across: something this government doesn’t comprehend and hence is a complete failure on the international front,” she said.
Fawad Chaudhry responded to Maryam’s tweet, questioning why all haters of Pakistan, from Ajit Doval to Mohib, ended up “in your palatial London palace?”
Last month, Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi had hit out at Mohib for his comments against Pakistan and called on him to “reflect and correct” his behaviour. “The national security adviser of Afghanistan carefully listen to me … as the foreign minister of Pakistan I say that no Pakistani will shake your hand or talk with you if you don’t desist from the kind of language you are using or the accusations you’re making against Pakistan,” Qureshi had said.
The foreign minister was responding to comments made by the Afghan national security adviser during a visit to Nangarhar province in May, during which he called Pakistan a “brothel house”, according to a Voice of America report.