“All countries have to work together to promote stability and peace in the region,” Ahsan Iqbal said during an exclusive interview on Thursday with the Global Times.
“If one part of the region is insecure, it has the potential to destabilise the whole region.”
Pakistan most effective bulwark against terrorism
Pakistan has often come under fire from the Western media as a “root of terrorism,” but it is also a victim rather than the one to blame. “Our region paid a heavy price for terrorism after 9/11 with the US invasion of Afghanistan, and the whole region became unstable,” Iqbal said.
Iqbal also noted that after Pakistan launched major operations against the attackers of the Peshawar school and the Red Mosque, it almost broke the back of the terrorist groups.
The interior minister also called for a political solution to the situation in Afghanistan, as the US-led military solution has not worked for more than a decade. “We have to engage all the regional countries because neighbours of Afghanistan have the biggest stake in its stability,” he told the Global Times.
“Afghanistan isn’t more stable than before 2001. We are still facing the threat of infiltration from Afghanistan to Pakistan through the western border.”
Pakistan has suffered heavily due to terrorism, which has caused the deaths of some 70,000 people in Pakistan, and more than $100 billion in economic losses, Iqbal said.
China defends Pakistan after Trump criticism
Under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) initiative, thousands of Chinese workers are living in Pakistan, and the interior minister labelled them as “national heroes.” “They are working in Pakistan to help Pakistan develop, they are our national heroes,” said Iqbal, who is also the Minister for Planning, Development and Reforms.
“It is our duty to provide them best security with all our means.”
Pakistan has raised the numbers of special forces to about 15,000 personnel now working full-time to provide security to CPEC projects, and to Chinese who are working in Pakistan, Iqbal noted.
This story originally appeared on the Global Times.
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