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Saudi donors most signifcant source of terrorism funding in Pakistan

Malik ishaq always had support of our gov. The terrorism in pak we see today is also a result of our pol parties and gov. And yes saudi gov does deserve blame.
If saudi citizens were funding it was saudis job to blck the funding. And saudi gov has always remained invloved in such activities in some or other.
I am talking about people who blame Saudi govt ONLY and donot blame Pakistanis.
Saudis aren't the ones blowing themselves it's Pakistanis. Pakistanis are the most to blame.
Fazlu,Baitullah,Abdullah,MalikIshaq all are/were Pakistanis. People say like ONLY KSA is the cause of terrorism in Pak while not say a word against Pakistanis. Before pointing fingers at others blame yourself as well.
Pakistanis are the most to be blamed. Period
 
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Wow. Just wow.

What can I say.

This thread should open the eyes of Pakistani who blindly support Saudi Arabia.
But some Pakistanis feel proud to call themselves Arabs, or their descendents! Jeeez!
 
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I am talking about people who blame Saudi govt ONLY and donot blame Pakistanis.
Saudis aren't the ones blowing themselves it's Pakistanis. Pakistanis are the most to blame.
Fazlu,Baitullah,Abdullah,MalikIshaq all are/were Pakistanis. People say like ONLY KSA is the cause of terrorism in Pak while not say a word against Pakistanis. Before pointing fingers at others blame yourself as well.
Pakistanis are the most to be blamed. Period

agree with you on this to a certain extent.
 
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These Pakistanis have been brainwashed in Saudi sponsored Madrassahs. Islamiat is already taught in schools and must be compulsory in schools and colleges. All the Madrassahs should be closed.
 
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The fact that there are local supporters like Lashkar e Jhangvi, Fazlullah and ASWJ on the payroll of their Saudi masters does not excuse the master. And it's no coincidence that Fazlullah ended up seeking refuge in the Saudi- funded militant bastion of kunar and nuristan. Stooges like Fazlullah, Malik Ishaq and others are simply foot soldiers promoting their master's agenda. Without the Saudi funding, there would be no foot soldiers.

The Saudi govt is complicit in funding militants in Pakistan as they want to create a Salafi-led fiefdom on Iran's doorstep. Funding mullah aziz was another one of their experiments. And if destabilizing the Pakistani state helps put Iran on the back foot, then that suits the Saudis just fine.

Let's not fool ourselves. At the end of the day, in a police state such as Saudi, influential Saudis would not have been able to fund a dog let alone militants and radical madrassas in Pakistan, without support from the Saudi regime. Most influential Saudis have ties to the establishment in any event. And we also know it was the Saudi regime, project led by Bandar that created and funded ISIS only 2 years ago, of course that was before the monster turned on its creator.
 
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Everybody know that what is new in that. I am sure Most of the Pakistanis will disagree because of obvious reason.
 
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Nation
Samson Sharaf


Yemen in the past hundred years has been through repeated turmoil. This includes the division of Yemen and the war begun by President Nasser of Egypt. Egyptian historians refer to the Egyptian-Russo intervention from 1962-1970 as their Vietnam. Though, on a timeline it preceded US withdrawal from Vietnam. It made an Israeli historian Michael Oren comment that the disastrous Egyptian military adventure in Yemen could easily be dubbed America’s Yemen in Vietnam. On the opposing front, Saudi Arabia and Jordon with covert and clandestine British support ran into a stalemate. In the global perspective this war was seen as a proxy front of the Cold War. Within Middle East, it was eclipsed by the inherent Arab and tribal politics. Directly or indirectly nearly every West Asian country including Iran was involved. Pakistan supplied weapons to the royalist (anti- Egyptian) group on call of Saudi Arabia. This Egyptian intervention affected its performance in the 1967 War; ceding the entire Sinai Peninsula to Israel.

Readers must remember that the division of Yemen was an effect and not a struggle. The collapse of Ottoman Empire and British imperial policies created new geographies in West Asia. North Yemen came into being when the Ottoman Empire fell, while South Yemen remained a British Colony. South won independence through a liberation struggle. On 22 May 1990 the two Yemens unified to form the Republic of Yemen only to erupt into a civil war in 1994.

Saudi perceptions in the region stem from their core belief of Wahabism. They established their first rule in 1744 under the dynasty’s 18th century founder, Muhammad bin Saud. Islamic Salafi Scholars, Muhammad ibn Abdul Wahhab and his descendants played a significant role in strengthening Saudi rule. In 1802, Abdul Aziz attacked the Shi’ite holy city of Karbala, killing thousands, looting and plundering. This invasion left long lasting imprints on Sunni-Shia relations. A joint Ottoman-Egyptian invasion in 1818 brought this kingdom to an end. The Saudis were able to re-establish their hold on Najd, with a capital at Riyadh. The second phase of this dynasty came to an end when Muhammad ibn Abdullah ibn Rashid of Hail expelled the last Saudi leader, Abdul-Rahman bin Faisal, in the Battle of Mulayda in 1891.

The third Saudi regime was formed after many meanderings between the Arab tribes, Ottomans, British and Americans. Ibn Saud died in 1953, after having cemented an alliance with the United States in 1945. He is still celebrated officially as the founder of modern Saudi Arabia. But to most Muslims in West Asia, the country remains a dictatorship ruling through strong religious decrees and inherent monotheist sentiment.


Over a period of two hundred years, Saudis despite reverses have managed to create space for their ideology exploiting the larger canvas of geopolitics. Possession of huge oil reserves and US support has emboldened them. Saudi Arabia will remain in awe of all Islamic denominations that are not monotheists and does not hesitate to ferment trouble in Muslim countries to promote its religious ideology.

On 20 November 1979, the Holy Sanctuary in Mecca was violently seized by dissidents led by Juhayman al-Otaybi and Abdullah al-Qahtani. The Saudi royal family had the Ulema issue a fatwa permitting the storming of the holy sanctuary. Saudi forces, reportedly aided by French and Pakistani storm troopers flushed out the rebels. In December 1982, Pakistan signed a defence protocol with Saudi Arabia thereby deploying combat brigades and air force for the protection of the Kingdom. These deployments took place in the backdrop of the Afghan conflict, Iranian Revolution and the spreading tide of Wahhabism in Pakistan. Except miserly petro dollars and plenty of terrorism, Pakistan gained nothing.

Iran has viewed Pakistan’s relations with the Gulf monarchs and USA as counter revolutionary. In reaction Iran has hedged its interests with India to pressurise Pakistan through proxies that trouble Pakistan in Afghanistan, Balochistan and other parts of the country.

Pakistan is a country that has for the past forty years disregarded its own sensitivities and vulnerabilities for dollars. It allowed diverse militant typologies to grow despite awareness that chickens inevitably come home to roost. As Pakistan continues to be sucked into sectarian strife, its appetite for petro dollars only seems to grow. Tied aid has created linkage of a dependence that cannot be broken despite the reality that exploration of resources and development of Gwadar challenge Saudi designs. The Yemen front will open no new era for Pakistan. Unless the umbilical cord is not cut, development will not come.

The second part of my opinion, Yemen: Crumbling Redoubt of Terrorism (Nation: March 28) was a wishful satire on the fable of Godot. Even if Pakistan enters the Middle East as a major player, it will never be permitted to operate against the logistic and finance lines of terrorists located in the Kingdom, nor will it be allowed the leeway that makes it stronger. Saudis will continue to feed and breed sidewinders in quest of their religious typologies and tribal politics. The dynamics of the Old and New Yemen will ensure that another flash point is created in a hornet’s nest.

The Saudis have a long history of infighting and intrigue. Pakistan’s only role will be to watch over the patrimonial guards of this house of Saud. Pakistan is a country willing to hold a gun to its own head.
 
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Nation

There are several apprehensions and arguments about whether or not Pakistan should send its troops to support Kingdom of Saudi Arabia in its offensive against Yemen.

According to the prevalent narrative, Saudi Arabia, a brotherly Muslim country having long-term strategic relations with us, should not be left alone at a difficult time. We should ensure the security of Haramain Sharifain at all costs. A strong argument is made that millions of our workers in Saudi Arabia, who send billions of dollars every year as remittances, might lose their jobs. Additionally there are myths and fallacies abound about the Houthis who are thought to have deposed a ‘legitimate’ government, and are seen as an Iranian proxy because of being Shia.

First and foremost, if Saudi Arabia is a Muslim “brotherly” country, so is Yemen. Quoting Senator Aitzaz Ahsan while speaking in the Joint Parliamentary Session, “Are we defending the Saudi state, the Saudi Government or Haramain Sharifain?” Or are we trying to save the Saudi monarchy’s interests? All of these causes are mutually exclusive and have no overlap whatsoever.

The Houthi government in San’aa has never threatened to attack Ka’aba or Masjid-e-Nabavi. They, like majority Pakistanis, Saudis and Iranians, are Muslims and must be as passionate about the holy sites as we are. In any case, as Aitzaz eloquently said in his speech, the Saudi air force is much superior to the Yemeni air defence. This makes it impossible to even imagine that the latter would attack the Saudi mainland with hundreds of miles of vast desert in between. This argument, therefore, must be put to rest and the debate should move forward on a rational basis, leaving aside false religiosity.

Throughout the Afghan Jihad of 1980s, all that Saudi Arabia did was pour assorted jihadi groups into our country, matching every single dollar put in by the US, with one petro dollar of its own, thereby creating a Frankenstein monster of terrorist groups with the active involvement of the ISI. Even during the Afghan Civil War in the post-Jihad years of the 1990s when the US put sanctions on us, we had little to no lobbying support or economic assistance from the Saudis.

What we have from them is millions of dollars poured into Deobandi madrassas propagating takfiri ideology and religious extremism, and refuge to our select leaders when they want to flee. Sometimes they replenish our coffers with cash just enough to oil our army’s arsenal, or to pay for our energy needs for a few months… not to end the crisis. The “strategic ally” argument, thus, is not impressive either.


Now come to the remittances and Pakistani workforce in Saudia, which we think is going to be affected in case we take a decision keeping in view our own national interest. My question is, has the Kingdom indicated something to this effect in discussions with our foreign office or the Prime Minister or the Army Chief? If so, we the citizens have a right to know what this supposed strategic ally is offering us. Let that be presented to the Parliament so the people of Pakistan may know how a “Muslim brotherly country” indulges in blackmail if its demands are not met.

Here, the MQM leader Altaf Hussain raises an important question. Talking about remittances, India has largest remittances coming from Saudi Arabia with the largest workforce there. Why then, she is not being blackmailed into sending its troops to the Kingdom? How come India is able to retain its self-respect as well as its sovereignty and self-interest? Why don’t we compete with India here too? Let’s hold our chin up and say what we must.

The way this conflict is being portrayed as a Shia-Sunni conflict undermines the home-grown struggle for rights in Yemen and ignores the history of political force asserted through militias rather than a legitimate central control through the writ of the state. Houthis follow a branch of Islamic sect called Zaydism, which is distinct from the Twelver Shias of Iran. In practice, they are closer to the Hanafi school of thought but do not identify as either Sunni or Shia. The variations of the word ‘Sunni’ also need to be in mind here. In the Indian and Pakistani sense, ‘Sunni’ or ‘Ahl-e-Sunnat’ depicts the Barelvi school of thought while in the Middle Eastern sense everyone non-Shia is called Sunni. In the Yemeni sense it would mean people following the Shafa’i school of thought.

Anyone who says Yemen’s is a Shia-Sunni problem knows little of Yemeni politics and society. The sectarian lines there have never been as stark as they are in rest of Middle East or in Pakistan. Zaydis do not observe different prayer timings or a different way of saying Salaat. Inter-marriages and truly pluralist societal norms make the Yemeni case absolutely different from that of Iraq, Syria and Lebanon. The slight tinge of ‘sectarianism’ started emerging in the 1980s to the 1990s when the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia started building Salafi proxies in Yemen.

The current problem has escalated from the Houthis’ continued resentment over neighboring powers ruling in Yemen through their paid puppets. That was one reason why they became one of the major forces that ousted President Saleh in 2012 who was considered to be America and Saudia’s man in Yemen. It was less than a year that Houthis realized the new man in Sana’a, Abd Rabbou Mansour Hadi was the new Saudi proxy ruling their land and had immense US support as well.


Ironically, fighting ‘puppet regimes’ and Saudi and American proxies, the Houthis (as their leader admitted last year) started getting training and logistic support from Iran. But even with this Iranian tinge to the conflict, it would be an over-simplification to say the conflict is purely geo-political in nature. Had it been geo-political, those powers supporting Shiite militias in Iraq would have been supporting Houthis against strong Al-Qaeda and ISIS threat in Southern Yemen. Had it been sectarian, Saudi Arabia would not have been supporting Houthis in 1960s against Egyptian forces.

With this backdrop, saying that the crisis would not have a sectarian fallout in Pakistan, would again be an over-simplification.

Moreover, how far it is in our national interest to alienate Iran who shares borders with us? We know that the Iranian government had called our ambassador in Tehran proposing a dialogue with Pakistan on the Yemen situation. Our foreign office preferred to not respond. In an on-camera meeting of the Senate Defence Committee, a member had reportedly asked the Foreign Secretary if we were invited to be part of coalition force against ISIS? The answer was, yes we were but we refused because we were busy with our own counter-terrorism plan Zarb-e-Azb and could not allocate our troops elsewhere. If that was the argument then, why can’t it be now?

Finally, taking a position against Iran can cost us dearly on the Pak-Iran Gas Pipeline Agreement, which we are not complying with already, under Saudi and US pressure. Let’s debate national interest now.
 
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Now come to the remittances and Pakistani workforce in Saudia
Don't worry about the workers. Saudi Arabia won't have any cheap labour if they fire them. It'll be more of a loss to them than us.
Other than that, Very well written post I've seen in a long time.
 
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Nation
Jalees Hazir


It is not hard to see that our brother countries killing civilians in Yemen are little more than pieces of chess being played by the the US. Yet our leaders of opinion in the parliament and media don’t seem ready to reckon with this uncomfortable reality. They’d rather pontificate endlessly about the Iran-Saudi rivalry and its sectarian dimensions, painting the uniqueness of Yemen in broad strokes of trending themes, all within the imperial narrative of course. Surely, there is a better way to talk about Yemen and to understand the barbarity of the attack on its people.

Mouthing misleading rhetoric about the brotherhood of Muslim countries will not get us anywhere. Do we care only about our rich Saudi brothers because they sent us dollars and free barrels of oil in difficult times? Should we care only about them even when they start bombing our poor Muslim brothers in Yemen? Why must we treat Yemen as a step-brother? And why should we be smitten senseless by the tainted favours of our two-faced royal Saudi brothers who are wreaking havoc in their neighbourhood and generally all over the brotherly Muslim world?

For decades, the House of Saud has manufactured monster proxies and mercenary militias, unleashing them in the name of Islam on targeted societies. It is nothing like our one-off flirtation with the Afghan mujahedin. We were but a tool in the hands of our royal Saudi brothers and the empire in its war against the Soviet Union, executing a suicidal policy for small rewards. We did not come up with the policy nor did we fund it. What about the masterminds and financiers?

It turns out the Saudis honed their tool of terrorist proxies to perfection. If anything, it seems to have become their favourite and most commonly used tool of endless war. They are unapologetic about the death and destruction they orchestrate. In recent years, we have seen this partnership at work in Syria in tandem with Israel and other Muslim brothers to topple the Assad regime, butchering and displacing millions of innocent civilians on the way, turning beautiful cities and villages to rubble. Is Syria a step-brother as well? And Iraq and Libya who were similarly destroyed by the two-faced super power and our two-faced royal saudi brothers.

With more than a little help from its Israeli friends, the US is directing the attack on Yemen from a joint coordination planning cell in the Coordination Center its forces have set up with the Saudis. To add fuel to the fire, the exceptional super power has accelerated arms shipments to the aggressors. In the empire’s topsy turvy world, a popular movement with political demands cutting across sectarian divides is described as Iran-backed Shia militants while rabidly sectarian Salafi militants(ISIS and others) manufactured by the Saudis, proxies butchering civilians and destroying cities, are billed as Syrian rebels fighting against Assad’s dictatorship.

Unless we are willing to look at the problem with our two-faced royal Saudi brothers and their shady alliance with the US and Israel squarely in the face, we will keep going round in useless circles, mired in faulty notions about Muslim brotherhood or in the equally misleading imperial narrative.

We have suffered enough for our mistake of facilitating the Afghan jihad and, thank God, we have survived to regret it. Today, there is a national consensus against terrorism under any brand name and the state institutions are confronting militant proxies. The military is our strongest bulwark against these proxies and it is successfully leading the assault with some crippled support from the other pillars of state. If you really think about it, Pakistan is actually at war with the same stock of subversive proxies that are being manufactured and supported by the House of Saud as we speak.

The deviousness of this Saudi-led effort can be gauged by the fact that though Pakistan has not joined the coalition bombing Yemen, our flag is prominently displayed behind the military spokesman deputed by the House of Saud during his press briefings. Has the government of Pakistan protested about this? Or is it too burdened by gratitude for the favours bestowed upon it by the House of Saud to object?

Should we indulge the Saudis because some 2 million Pakistanis work there? Even if they are treated like slaves with no rights and exploited? Does it not matter that they labor to construct Saudi cities and provide useful services to its citizens? Should we ignore the fact that Saudi Arabia is killing our Muslim brothers in Yemen because of the 200 tons of dates that they’ve sent us?
 
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These Pakistanis have been brainwashed in Saudi sponsored Madrassahs. Islamiat is already taught in schools and must be compulsory in schools and colleges. All the Madrassahs should be closed.
No, madrassas aren't the problem, its the people running them, who're the problem. These are desperately needed, as Pakistan has an extreme shortage of teachers, so these madrassas end up providing vital education needed for children to learn how to read and write.

If madrassas were to shut down across the board, you'd see literacy levels plummet across Pakistan as a whole.
 
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Nation
No to Proxy Wars


It maybe time for the House of Sharif to pay back the House of Saud, but Pakistanis are certainly not falling prey to Raiwind’s spin that there is a danger to Saudi Arabia’s territorial integrity/existence or that the Holy cities of Mecca and Medina are under any form of threat. God forbid, should any of these were to ever actually happen; the entire Pakistani nation would rise to defend our Saudi brothers.

Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif may have acted unwisely if he made certain heavy commitments to the Saudi royal family on the assumption that by playing on Pakistanis’ emotions, he would be blindly empowered to place the full potential of Pakistan’s armed forces at the disposal of the ten-nation Saudi-led coalition against Yemen.
He now finds himself in a fix being unable to get a blanket public and parliamentary approval for his alleged understanding with the Saudi royal family.

Does the mysterious Saudi gift of $1.5bn to Pakistan after Nawaz Sharif came to power in 2013 have any connection with Saudi’s demand for Pakistan’s armed forces’ deployment on Yemen border? Despite the many contradictory statements by government’s spin masters to hush up the matter, Pakistanis remain suspicious about the real utilisation of this gift. Hiding the truth or misguiding their own people has always remained the hallmark of successive civilian and military rulers in Pakistan.

That the public sentiment is vehemently opposed to any form of intervention in Yemen conflict is evident from print media editorials, heated debates by security experts and analysts in electronic media, views of common masses and not to forget our extremely vibrant social media.

The ongoing debate in parliament’s joint session, too, reflects the nation’s thinking and conviction in this respect.
Our love for Saudi Arabia notwithstanding, not one lawmaker supported the dispatch of Pakistani combat troops, aircraft or naval warships in support of the Saudi-led coalition forces.

The ruling political elite therefore cannot ignore and act against strong public opinion that cautions Raiwind to ensure that the country’s national interests should not be compromised for any other political or personal consideration.While Pakistan fights its own war of survival with its army engaged on multiple fronts, it would be foolhardy on part of the country’s leadership if our armed forces were pushed into another quagmire. Pakistan Army cannot lose focus on its ongoing decisive Operation Zarb-e-Azb against anti-state militant groups.After our bitter experiences as a frontline state in the Afghan jihad and the thirteen years old unending war on terror, the lesson of history is crystal clear.

Let us not repeat the past blunders of fighting others’ wars and getting ruined in the process.
Pakistan is neither a member of the Arab League (AL) nor the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) and cannot afford to take sides in a regional conflict that could have grave implications for its own internal security.
As a responsible nuclear power and member of international community and one which is committed to world peace, Pakistan cannot afford to be a part of aggression against Yemen; a smaller, weaker and impoverished Muslim country with which Pakistan has no enmity.

One can afford to annoy a friend but certainly cannot antagonise or lose an immediate neighbour.
While Arab/GCC countries maintain traditional and historical enmity with Iran, Pakistan on the other hand cannot become a party to any conflict that may be considered damaging to Iranian interests in the region.
Iran, too, has a responsibility not to create hostile conditions by arming Houthi rebels that not only destabilise Saudi Arabia’s borders with Yemen but also risk possible escalation in regional tensions.Reports of Iranian navy deployment off Aden signal Iran’s intentions to enter the conflict.

Pakistanis have not forgotten Iranian backing under the late Shah of Iran in our 1965/71 wars with India as well as active military support to quell the Afghan/USSR supported insurgency in Balochistan in early seventies.
Pakistan needs to work closely with Iran to eliminate militant groups that commit acts of terrorism across Pak-Iran border and threaten peace in Balochistan.


Without Iranian support, durable peace cannot be achieved in Afghanistan. With western sanctions likely to be lifted in wake of Iran’s nuclear deal with P5+1 countries, the prospects of Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline project finally becoming a reality look bright.Iran, too, needs to reciprocate vis a vis Pakistan’s sensitivities and not let our security interests be undermined due to its increasing defence cooperation with India in recent years.

Can Pakistan ever think of destabilising any of our Islamic brothers? Has Pakistan not welcomed royal families of friendly Gulf states with open arms to enjoy hunting trips in various parts of Pakistan? Pakistanis acknowledge that a bulk of our foreign exchange remittances come from Gulf states.

But Pakistanis also ask why certain friendly countries like Saudi Arabia remained silent spectators and did not use their influence to pressurise TTP groups with known ideological linkages with such Muslim countries, to renounce militancy and stop terrorist activities against our state.

The time has come when Pakistan’s political and military leadership must prevail upon Saudi as well as Iran to also stop funding and supporting their militant proxies in Pakistan that kindled the flames of sectarianism in our society.
 
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The recent $1.5 billion dollars 'gift' from Saudis was more of a handout to Nawaz Sharif and not the country, as the Saudis didn't provide a single dollar in aid during the five years of the PPP government.

However, the Saudis have sent billions of dollars in aid to Pakistan over the last two decades. Its just that this 'aid' was sent to Lashkar Jhangvi, TTP, among other militant groups, as well as hundreds of radical madrassas, all working together to target and eventually destabilize the Pakistani state.

So actually, the Saudis owe us a lot more $$$ to make up for all their past sins. The $1.5 billion does not even begin to cover it.
 
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DAWN

ISLAMABAD: Ahle Sunnat Wal Jamaat (ASWJ) chief Maulana Muhammad Ahmad Ludhianvi has decried the resolution passed by the parliament on Yemen as “against the will of the people” and “a waste of time”.
“We have to give unconditional support to Saudi Arabia to save the honour of Ummul Momineen Hazrat Ayesha Siddiqa. We will not allow anyone to disrespect the Haramain Sharifain,” he declared at a rally staged by ASWJ outside the National Press Club on Sunday.

Maulana Ludhianvi, who had been leading the pro-Saudi rallies in the federal capital over the last week, announced that more such public meetings would be held in Islamabad, Karachi and Lahore before an all-party conference is called to finalise plans “save the Harmain Sharifain”.

“If our government does not take the decision, we will go to Saudi Arabia, just like Ameer Ansar Ul Ummah Fazal-ur-Rehman Khalil went to Afghanistan,” he said.
Maulana Ludhianvi said some elements were stirring up the Shia-Sunni schism to divert the attention of the Pakistanis away from Saudi Arabia.

However, when the participants of the ASWJ rally started chanting slogans against the parliamentarians, he stopped them. He said he will soon be rejoining the parliament so they should not criticise the lawmakers.

In his address to the rally, Maulana Fazal ur Rehman Khalil said Saudi Arabia has always supported Pakistan and now it is time Pakistan supported Saudi Arabia.
There is no difference between protecting “the Haramain or the Sheikhain” but there is a clash between ideologies, he said.


“Those who want ceasefire in Yemen, favour operations against Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan,” he added.

Another religious leader, Maulana Ashraf Ali, felt disappointed at the statements of political parties regarding Baitullah (holy Kaaba). “Our army and all our resources should be devoted to the Haramain Sharifain,” he said.
Pir Saifullah Khalid observed that although Allah has taken the responsibility to protect the Baitullah, “we have to prove how devoted we are to His house”.
Participants of the ASWJ rally gathered at Lal Masjid and marched to the National Press Club chanting slogans. Strict security measures were taken by the police and roads leading to the Press Club were closed to traffic.
 
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