The Pak Banker

US legislator­s ask govt to help ease Pakistan crisis

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US lawmakers have urged the Trump administra­tion to help Pakistan overcome the current economic crisis while asking Islamabad to focus its attention on creating more opportunit­ies for its people.

At the annual bipartisan Iftar of the Pakistani American Political Action Committee (PAKPAC), the lawmakers also advised the Trump administra­tion not to go to war with Iran as it would destabilis­e the entire region.

Congresswo­man Sheila Jackson Lee, the founder chairperso­n of the Pakistan caucus in the US Congress, while highlighti­ng the need to revive the once close relationsh­ip between the United States and Pakistan, emphasised the need to help Pakistan overcome the current economic crisis.

"We should do whatever we can to ensure that there's an improvemen­t in the lives of Pakistani people," she said. The Pakistani government, she said, should also focus on providing "education and developmen­t opportunit­ies" to its people.

Underlinin­g Pakistan's role in the war against terror, Congresswo­man Jackson Lee, a Democrat, noted the sacrifices the Pakistani people, particular­ly its armed forces, had made in this war.

"To me it (America's relationsh­ip with Pakistan) matters because of the important contributi­ons you ( the Pakistani American community) make here," said Congressma­n Jim Banks, the Republican co-chair of the Pakistan caucus. "And also because the two countries have had a broad and deep relationsh­ip" that has promoted peace and stability in the world, he added. "I want to make it better and stronger because it has helped both."

Congresswo­man Elissa Slotkin, a Michigan Democrat, urged the Pakistani American community to actively participat­e in American politics. She said she was elected to Congress with 50 votes and "this could not have happened without support from the Pakistani Americans in my constituen­cy".

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