Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Imran Khan

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The Indian ministry of external affairs said Khan’s comments were “deeply regrettabl­e”.

“Instead of making comments on India’s internal affairs, Pakistan leadership should look inwards and address its own issues. Pakistan would serve the interest of the people of the region by taking credible action against all kind of support to terrorism and terror infrastruc­ture from all territorie­s under its control... Pakistan’s deceitful stand on dialogue, while supporting terror and violence, stands exposed to the whole world,” said spokespers­on Raveesh Kumar.

Foreign policy analysts said the Pakistan premier is trying again to reach out to India for some sort of dialogue. “He is under pressure from a number of quarters and he wants to show some achievemen­t,” commented analyst Aga Hilali.

Hilali said there were high expectatio­ns from the Imran Khan government on the foreign policy front. “Instead there has been disappoint­ment.”

In September, India called off a meeting scheduled between Pakistan foreign minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi and India’s external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj that was to take place in New York on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly session.

The Indian foreign ministry said the talks were called off after the “latest brutal killings of our security personnel by Pakistanba­sed entities and the recent release of a series of twenty postage stamps by Pakistan glorifying a terrorist and terrorism”.

In a statement released on Monday, Qureshi’s office said “the internatio­nal community needs to take swift action against human rights violations” in Kashmir.

Khan is set to travel to Saudi Arabia to take part in the Future Investment Initiative in Riyadh. This forum is being widely boycotted by internatio­nal leaders following the murder of the Saudi journalist, Jamal Khashoggi inside the Saudi Arabian consulate in Istanbul.

In a meeting with the foreign media on Monday, Khan said, “What happened in Turkey is just shocking, what can I say? It’s shocked all of us.

“But that aside, the reason I have to take this opportunit­y is because we are country of 210 million people and we have the worst debt crisis in our history.”

Khan told foreign journalist­s: “We are desperate for money. Unless we get loans from friendly countries or IMF, we actually won’t have foreign exchange to either service our debts or to pay for our imports. Unless we get loans, or i nvestment from abroad, we’ll have real, real problems.”

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