By
Asif Farooqi, IOL Pakistan Correspondent
ISLAMABAD,
August 19 (IslamOnline) - The government of Pakistan denied Monday,
August 19, there were any Al-Qaeda member on its soil, snubbing a U.S.
general’s claims that there were more Al-Qaeda members in Pakistan
than in Afghanistan.
Lt.
General Dan McNeil, commander of the coalition forces in Afghanistan
was quoted in some media reports as saying that most of Al-Qaeda
members had fled to Pakistan and that the task to eliminate Al-Qaeda
was getting more complicated as the permission to undertake combat
operations against the enemy in Pakistan was not forthcoming.
“The
general to whom this statement is attributed does not live in this
country and has no knowledge of the situation on the ground here,”
Aziz Ahmed Khan, Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry spokesman said here
Monday August 19.
Khan
said Pakistan Interior Minister, Moinuddin Haider, who is monitoring
the border situation with Afghanistan, has already denied the presence
of any Al-Qaeda members in Pakistan.
“Our
Interior Minister’s claim is more authenticated as he knows the
situation on the ground more than anyone else who is not living in
this country,” he added.
Pakistan
flatly refused Monday to provide security to the foreign election
observer’s teams in the country or to offer them a formal invitation
or to sign an agreement for observing the October elections.
“There
is no need for extra security measures for these observers as adequate
security arrangements are already in place for the general
elections,” a foreign office spokesman said in answer to a question
about providing security to the European Union election observers as
requested by them.
The
E.U. delegation, which arrived in the country to monitor the October
election, too would need a formal invitation to observe the polls.
“The
statement by the government that it welcomes foreign observers for the
election process is enough and there is no need to issue a formal
invitation or to sign a memorandum of understanding to that effect,”
Aziz told reporters while answering a host of questions about the
latest controversy between the government and E.U. observers on the
issues relating to the security and the conduct of their work in the
country.
Head
of the 167-member E.U. delegation which arrived in Pakistan early this
month to observe the October elections, had observed that the
government was reluctant to offer adequate security arrangements for
the delegation. John Cushanahan requested the government to issue a
formal invitation for poll observance and proposed an MOU for this
purpose.
The
foreign office spokesman, however, made it clear to the newsmen that
none of these demands were to be met by the government.
“Normal
security arrangements made for the general elections are adequate and
there is no need to provide extra security for such a large number of
people who would be coming to Pakistan to observe elections,” Khan
said.
Since
January this year, 59 people have been killed in terrorist attacks in
Pakistan mainly targeting foreign nationals.
The
foreign office spokesman also said there was no need for E.U.
observers to receive a formal invitation as they have come of their
own accord and the government acceded to that.
The
government, through a statement early this year, had invited foreign
observers to come to Pakistan and watch the crucial general elections
planned for October. “Such a statement from a country is enough as
invitation. We don’t need to issue a separate invitation to
everyone,” Khan told reporters.
Khan
observed that some of the press statements attributed to the
delegation amounted to the interference by them in the domestic
Pakistani affairs. “But later the delegation clarified their
position and now that issue is resolved,” he added.
Khan
questioned the E.U. delegation as to why it did not go to Indian-held
Kashmir for polls monitoring and chose to come to Pakistan and then
ask for redressing such issues like invitation of extra security.
Khan
also denied any chance of a bilateral meeting between Pakistani and
Indian foreign ministers who are in Katmandu for a regional conference