* President Zardaris spokesman says UK committed £640 million in next four years, France offered nuclear technology to Islamabad
ISLAMABAD: The US House of Representatives has approved $1.9 billion in aid for Pakistan, President Asif Ali Zardaris spokesman Farhatullah Babar said.
The president returned to Islamabad on Monday after concluding an official visit to Libya, the UK, the US and France.
The tour also saw the UK committing £640 million over the next four years and France offering civil nuclear technology to Pakistan after decades of embargo in addition to specific aid for the immediate rehabilitation of IDPs and broadening of the partnership to fight the scourge of extremism and militancy, Babar said.
He said wide-ranging measures that were announced during the visit would strengthen Pakistans economy and garner international support to the country.
Babar said the approval of $1.9 billion was in addition to assistance the Obama administration had requested for Pakistan.
No less significant was the French presidents offer of a wide ranging civil nuclear deal to Pakistan to help it overcome its energy crisis to make the industries run and create jobs and opportunities, the spokesman said.
In view of the crisis of the internally displaced population of Pakistan, the UK and France announced 12 million euros each for the IDPs while the US House of Representatives made a special provision for them in the aid bill.
Babar said in a week that saw the National Assembly backing operation against the Taliban, wire services transmitting pictures and TV channels sound bytes of displaced people lining up for food in camps, President Zardari cautioned the international community that it was extremely critical that the IDPs were rehabilitated to prevent them from falling prey to the Taliban propaganda.
The president, he said, also flew to New York from Washington to urge the UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon for a global appeal to help Pakistan deal with the human catastrophe resulting from the action against the Taliban in Swat, a request which the UN chief accepted. The presidential brief included a multi-dimensional plan prepared by the government to defend the countrys democratic system against the Taliban onslaught, Babar said, adding that over half a dozen items in the plan contained details ranging from massive investment in education to strengthening of the civilian law enforcing agencies, from recruitment of another 100,000 special police force to building of bomb-proof police stations, from improving the border security regimen to overcoming the energy crisis and from specific projects in agricultural development to opening of European and US markets to Pakistani products to help regenerate the countrys economy.
The call for trade, not aid was heeded as the British prime minister addressed a letter to the European Union to place this issue on its summit agenda in Brussels on June 17, he said.