Kidnapped Iranian border guards not in Pakistan: FO

Iran urges UN action over abducted soldiers, ties with Islamabad have taken hit since abduction.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif (L). PHOTO:REUTERS/FILE

TEHRAN:
The Iranian border guards were not in Pakistan, stated Foreign Officer spokesperson Tasnim Aslam during her weekly briefing in Islamabad, RadioPakistan reported.

She said that there were no signs that proved the presence of the soldiers in Pakistan, adding that Pakistan will make every effort to help Iran recover the guards.

Aslam also stated that the body of the murdered Iranian guard was not found from Pakistani territory.

On March 24, Jaishul Adl, the rebel group operating in southeast Iran, had claimed to have killed one of the five abducted soldiers and threatened further executions.

Iran urges UN action over abducted soldiers

Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif has urged the United Nations help to secure the release of Iranian border soldiers abducted by militants, media reported today.

Zarif sent a message to UN chief Ban Ki moon on the evening of March 26 demanding action from the international community, saying "mere condemnation of acts of terrorism is not enough".

His urgent plea to the UN chief came after Jaishul Adl had claimed responsibility of the murder of one of the guards.

Ban had on March 25 condemned the reported killing as an "appalling act" and urged that the perpetrators be brought to justice.


The young soldiers, who were serving their 24-month mandatory military service, are believed to have been taken into neighbouring Pakistan after being kidnapped in February.

Zarif linked the abduction to what he termed a series of "terrorist atrocities against Iranian citizens, including diplomats and other officials", according to a copy of his letter to Ban posted on his Facebook page.

He decried action against Iran by "state-sponsored extremist groups, with similar patterns of funding, coordination, support and direction".

Zarif did not name any countries but Iranian officials have pointed the finger of blame at regional rivals, particularly Saudi Arabia, for a number of attacks against Iranian diplomatic missions in Lebanon, Pakistan and Yemen.

Relationships with Riyadh have deteriorated in recent years over Tehran's controversial nuclear drive and its support for the Syrian regime, as well as Saudi support for Bahrain in face of a Shia uprising.

A diplomatic source in Tehran said the letter could pave the way for a debate within the UN as "state-sponsored terrorism" is a regional issue.

Jaishul Adl, which took up arms in 2012 to fight for what it says are the rights of Iran's minority Sunni population, on March 23 warned of further executions should Tehran refuse to release Sunni prisoners.

It claimed responsibility for killing a local prosecutor and 14 Iranian border guards in an ambush in 2013.

Ties with Islamabad have taken hit since the abduction, with Iran criticising what it calls Pakistan's inability to secure its borders and purge its soil of militants.

In a phone call with Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani demanded "serious and swift action" to free the soldiers.
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