Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

‘Want to help India, Pak open talks’

S Arabia envoy says Pak Pmelect’s overtures ‘positive’, hopes to help start talk process if asked to do so

- Saud bin Mohammed alsati

Saudi Arabia and India is our strategic partner and we hope that dialogue will be resumed between the two countries,” he said. “If we can and if we are asked to help, we will be very happy to help,” he added.

During an interview, al-sati spoke on a wide range of issues, including bilateral security cooperatio­n and Iran’s alleged meddling in Afghanista­n.

Referring to the arrest of a suspected Lashkar-e-taiba operative at the New Delhi airport after his deportatio­n from Saudi Arabia on August 5, the envoy said there is “excellent” cooperatio­n between the two sides to counter extremism and terror financing. “There is no outstandin­g issue in terms of security cooperatio­n…there is zero terror financing (from Saudi Arabia) and we don’t allow any (illegal) money transfers to any organizati­ons worldwide and particular­ly to India,” he said.

Asked what action Saudi Arabia will take if controvers­ial preacher Zakir Naik, whose extraditio­n has been sought from Malaysia, returned to the kingdom, al-sati said he would not go into hypothetic­al matters.

“All I can say is Zakir Naik is an Indian national who visited Saudi Arabia like any other Indian national and left... he is not in the kingdom anymore. We don’t intervene in other countries’ matters,” he said.

While backing efforts to reconcile with Taliban elements that give up violence in Afghanista­n, al-sati said his country hosted a conference of ‘ulema’ that encouraged national reconcilia­tion to end instabilit­y and war.

“Afghani national reconcilia­tion is very important for the political process to succeed. The main principle here is denouncing terrorism and putting aside weapons to come to the political process and working with other Afghan groups to reconcile,” he said.

However, the envoy criticised Iran’s interventi­on in Afghanista­n, including the recruitmen­t of Afghan Shias and “training them and sending them to areas of conflict” such as Syria. He said there were also reports of Iran recruiting from among Afghan refugees and sending them to countries such as Syria, Iraq and Yemen.

“Using these recruits to intervene in other countries’ internal affairs and destabilis­ing their security is not going to…help in countering terrorism. So we have to pay attention to this,” he said.

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