Hindustan Times (East UP)

Pak, UAE ties come under strain after stand on Israel

- Shishir Gupta

IT IS LIKELY THAT THE UAE COULD IMPOSE TIGHTER VISA NORMS FOR PAKISTANI NATIONALS WHO WISH TO TRAVEL TO THE EMIRATES FOR EMPLOYMENT

Relations between Pakistan and the UAE appear to be on a sharp downward spiral in recent weeks, particular­ly after Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan was critical of the UAE’s formalisat­ion of its relationsh­ip with Israel, people familiar with the matter said on condition of anonymity.

This has manifested itself not just in the arrest of pro-Palestine Pakistani activists in the UAE, but also of other Pakistani residents, sometimes for minor crimes. The people familiar with the matter said about 5,000 Pakistani inmates are housed in Al Sweihan Jail in Abu Dhabi alone.

It is likely that the UAE could impose tighter visa norms for Pakistani nationals who wish to travel to the Emirates for employment. HT learns that Pakistani residents are finding it difficult to renew Resident Permits, and there has been a buzz about deportatio­n, although no reports of a large-scale exercise to this effect have emerged.

HT also learns that the Pakistani Ambassador in Abu Dhabi, Ghulam Dastgir, recently met senior leaders of the ruling establishm­ent of the UAE in this regard — but was told to back off.

Interestin­gly, while the immediate trigger may be Khan’s comments, some of the UAE’s moves appear to have been prompted by the findings of its investigat­ion into the 2017 attack in Kandahar in which five UAE diplomats died. The people cited in the first instance said the UAE investigat­ors concluded that the Haqqani Network was behind the attack, and that Pakistan’s all-powerful Inter-Services Intelligen­ce spy agency was also directly involved. Back then, Islamabad’s immediate reaction was to blame Iran for the attack.

The developmen­ts in the UAE’s relationsh­ip with Pakistan also need to be seen in the context of Saudi Arabia’s ties with Pakistan. Islamabad’s efforts to involve West Asian nations in issues concerning its relationsh­ip with New Delhi haven’t gone down well in both countries, the people familiar with the matter added.

Pakistani foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi warned the Saudi-led Organizati­on of Islamic Cooperatio­n (OIC) in August that if it did not convene a meeting of the OIC’s Council of Foreign Ministers to discuss India’s nullificat­ion of Article 370 in J&K, Pakistan would go ahead to call a meeting of Islamic countries that would stand by it on the Kashmir issue.

Saudi Arabia and Pakistan are also locked in tough negotiatio­ns for repayment of debt. In 2018, with Islamabad facing a current accounts crisis, the Saudis had extended Pakistan a $6.2 billion package, which included $3 billion in loans, and oil on deferred payments worth $3.2 billion. In addition to calling in the loans, Riyadh has frozen the oil credit facility extended to Pakistan.

And recently, Saudi Arabia asked the Pakistani Embassy in Riyadh to not hold any public event to commemorat­e what it observes as “Kashmir Black Day” (October 27) .

The worsening relationsh­ips with the UAE and Saudi Arabia should worry Pakistan, which has for years, survived on support from West Asia. It is this support that has prevented its isolation, despite enough evidence of its involvemen­t in fostering terror groups, and using them to achieve its own ends. Loss of support from these countries will not only hurt Pakistan economical­ly but may also leave it without too many friends even in the Muslim world.

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