Muscat Daily

French nationals in Pakistan refuse embassy call to leave

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Islamabad, Pakistan - The French community in Pakistan is torn between disbelief, fear and annoyance in reaction to their embassy’s call for them to leave the country after Francophob­ic rioting this week by an extremist party.

Most, it seems, have decided to stay put.

In a terse three-line email, accompanie­d by the words ‘ urgent’, the Embassy in Islamabad on Thursday recommende­d its nationals and French companies temporaril­y leave Pakistan, because of ‘serious threats’.

The email, which did not specify the nature of the risks, caused shock and consternat­ion among the few hundred-strong French community.

Jean-Michel Quarantott­i, who has taught French at the American school in Islamabad for three years, was first alerted to the embassy advisory by a student.

“I won’t hide from you that at first I felt a little bit of fear, panic,” he told AFP. “It’s not my first foreign country - I did a lot before arriving in Pakistan - but I was really shocked. I didn’t expect to go through this.”

His first thought was to pack up and leave, but after discussing the situation with colleagues he said reason took over from emotion. “The Pakistanis around me advised me to stay,” he said. “They told me that they would protect me.”

“It was very touching to see the solidarity around me, from people who told me: ‘We are here for you, do not worry, we will defend you’.”

The embassy announceme­nt came after days of violent protests orchestrat­ed by the radical Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) after the arrest in Lahore on Monday of leader Saad Rizvi, who had called for a march on the capital to demand the expulsion of the French ambassador.

Four policemen were killed in the rioting.

AnotherFre­nch national Julien - an assumed name because he does not wish to divulge his identity - has also chosen to stay put.

“It’s a recommenda­tion, so I won’t leave,” he told AFP.

He also refused his employer’s offer to repatriate him to Europe or put armed guards outside his home.

“Anyway, since October, November, it’s been all ups and downs. So we’ll wait for it to calm down,” the Islamabad resident said. “The watchword is vigilance,” added Laurent Cinot, a consultant for the World Bank who arrived in the capital less than two months ago.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) party supporters at an anti-France rally in the Barakahu neighbourh­ood of Islamabad on April 13
(AFP) Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) party supporters at an anti-France rally in the Barakahu neighbourh­ood of Islamabad on April 13

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