PESHAWAR: Police in Peshawar have launched a campaign against crystal meth, or ice, and have arrested more than 40 dealers and seized 2kg of the drug in the last two days, Superintendent Javed Iqbal said on Saturday.
He appealed to the public and the media to report the sale of ice and other drugs to the police. Ice is the purest and most potent form of methamphetamine. It comes as a powder or as crystals that are usually snorted, injected or smoked.
As part of the campaign, seminars will be organized at colleges and universities, banners and pamphlets will be displayed in public places, and religious scholars and prayer leaders in mosques are being asked to raise awareness about the ill effects of ice, Iqbal said.
The drug “is brought from Afghanistan and stored in the tribal districts,” he added. The administration of the tribal districts bordering Afghanistan have been asked to increase surveillance against ice smugglers, he said.
Superintendent Shahzada Kaukab Farooq told Arab News that ice is costly, “and Peshawar is home to people who can afford it.”
Peshawar police launch campaign against crystal meth
Peshawar police launch campaign against crystal meth
- Police says that ice drug is brought from Afghanistan and stored in the tribal districts before it reaches Peshawar
- Peshawar Police plans an awareness campaign against the ice drug in colleges and universities
Afghan interior minister welcomes Pakistani scholars’ ‘positive’ remarks about Kabul
- Pakistani religious scholars on Dec. 23 called for easing tensions between Islamabad and Kabul, resumption of trade
- Sirajuddin Haqqani says Afghanistan is committed to regional peace, Afghans have “no intentions to threaten anyone”
PESHAWAR: Afghanistan’s Interior Minister Sirajuddin Haqqani recently thanked Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar and religious scholars from the country for expressing positive statements for Kabul despite tensions between the two countries.
A meeting of religious scholars in Pakistan on Dec. 23, attended by Jamiat Ulama-e-Pakistan political party head Maulana Fazl-ur-Rehman, called for easing tensions between the two states. The scholars also called for allowing resumption of trade and movement of people between Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Pakistani news media outlets reported on Saturday that Dar, who is also Pakistan’s foreign minister, praised Haqqani’s earlier statement in which the Afghan minister stressed resolving tensions between Islamabad and Kabul through dialogue.
In a video statement on Sunday, Haqqani said Afghanistan is committed to peace and stability in the country and the region, adding that Afghans have “no intentions to threaten anyone.” He appreciated Rehman and religious scholar Mufti Taqi Usmani for speaking in a “positive” manner about Afghanistan in the Dec. 23 meeting.
“We are thankful and grateful for their approach and views,” Haqqani said.
“Similarly, we really appreciate the positive remarks by Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar, who spoke in a positive way about Afghanistan.”
The Afghan minister’s statement comes in the backdrop of increased tensions between Afghanistan and Pakistan amid a surge in militant attacks in the latter’s territory.
Pakistan blames Afghanistan’s government for facilitating attacks by the Pakistani Taliban or TTP group. Islamabad accuses Kabul of allowing TTP militants to take shelter in sanctuaries in Afghanistan from where they carry out attacks targeting Pakistan.
Kabul denies the charges and says it cannot be held responsible for security lapses and challenges in Pakistan.
The two countries engaged in fierce border clashes in October that led to the killings of dozens of soldiers and civilians on both sides. Pakistan and Afghanistan subsequently agreed to a temporary ceasefire and have held three rounds of peace talks that remained inconclusive.
Tensions persist as Pakistan has vowed to go after militants even in Afghanistan that threaten the lives of its citizens. Afghan officials have warned Pakistan of retaliation if it attacks Afghanistan.











