ISLAMABAD: Some members of the public in the Pakistani capital of Islamabad said on Thursday they hoped for Democrat Joe Biden to win the US presidential race while others adviced caution, saying any US leader would protect the country’s own interests and Pakistan needed to prepare to work with whoever won.
Election officials are tallying votes in a handful of states that will determine the outcome.
As Biden has edged closer to victory, President Donald Trump has alleged fraud without providing evidence, filed lawsuits and called for recounts in a race yet to be decided two days after polls closed.
Pakistan is of huge strategic importance to the US and has remained a main ally as the US has sought to defeat al Qaeda and cripple the Taliban in neighboring Afghanistan.
Washington also depends on Pakistan to supply its forces in Afghanistan, but ties have been strained by allegations time and again that Pakistan offers safe havens to the Afghan Taliban, which Islamabad denies.
In recent months, Pakistan has played a behind-the-scenes role in supporting peace talks with the Afghan Taliban, including facilitating travel to negotiations, and is seen as a key player in Washington’s plans to end its longest war.
“I’m all for Biden,” Shakeel Ahmed, an IT professional in Islamabad, told Arab News. “He is a mature and far-sighted politician and I think his policies will help end decades-old conflicts, like in Afghanistan, through negotiations.”
However, he said the US administration, irrespective of who became president, would pursue its own foreign policy interests and Pakistan needed to prepare to work with whoever won the election.
“Every country protects its interests,” Ahmed said.
Mohammad Yaqub, a shopkeeper in Islamabad, said a Trump defeat would be “bad” for other populist governments and for strongmen like Trump, with scant concern for human rights and constitutional rule, who had come to power around the world in recent years.
“People like their leaders to be expressive and sensitive to public issues and that’s why they had elected Trump in the US and [Prime Minister] Imran Khan in Pakistan,” Yaqub said.
Khan and Trump met in Washington last year, resolving to reset ties.
Yaqub said Khan had developed ‘good chemistry’ with Trump on many issues, including Afghanistan, and therefore his reelection would be beneficial for Pakistan.
But Arshad Haider, an economics student, was skeptical a new president would change Pakistan’s complicated relationship with the US.
“The US has always used and cheated us,” he said, adding that Pakistan needed to strengthen its economy and defence systems by boosting exports and industrial production instead of always looking to the US for financial aid and military support.
“We should set our house in order to progress,” Haider said, “instead of pinning out hopes on the US elections and US president.”
In Islamabad, members of the public advice caution no matter which way US vote swings
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In Islamabad, members of the public advice caution no matter which way US vote swings
- Election officials are tallying votes in a handful of states that will determine the outcome with Biden edging closer to victory
- Trump has alleged fraud, filed lawsuits and called for recounts in a race yet to be decided two days after polls closed
Saudi Arabia condemns deadly mosque bombing in Pakistan’s capital
- The Kingdom rejects targeting of places of worship, expresses solidarity with Pakistan
- Saudi foreign ministry offers condolences to victims’ families, wishes injured recovery
ISLAMABAD: Saudi Arabia on Friday condemned the suicide bombing that targeted a mosque in Islamabad, expressing solidarity with Pakistan after the attack killed and injured dozens on the outskirts of the capital.
The blast, which struck during Friday prayers, killed at least 31 people and wounded more than 160 others, according to Pakistani authorities.
In a statement issued by its foreign ministry, Saudi Arabia denounced the targeting of a place of worship and rejected all forms of violence and extremism.
“The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia expresses its strong condemnation and denunciation of the terrorist bombing that targeted a mosque in the capital of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, Islamabad,” the statement said.
It added that the Kingdom stood firmly against attacks on civilians and places of worship and reaffirmed its support for Pakistan in confronting militant violence.
The ministry also extended condolences to the families of those killed and expressed sympathy with the Pakistani government and people, wishing the wounded a speedy recovery.
No militant group has so far claimed responsibility for the attack, which Pakistani officials say is being investigated.









