PM Khan calls for international action to combat Islamophobia

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan Khan speaks at the Trade and Investments conference during his two-day visit in Colombo, Sri Lanka February 24, 2021. (REUTERS)
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Updated 14 June 2021
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PM Khan calls for international action to combat Islamophobia

  • Khan makes the call in an interview with Canadian broadcaster CBC after last week's killing of a Pakistan-origin Muslim family in Ontario
  • Pakistan has been lobbying the cause of combating Islamophobia internationally since PM Khan came to power in 2018

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan on Sunday called for international action in addressing online hate to combat Islamophobia.

Khan made the call in a live interview with Canadian broadcaster CBC News as he was commenting on last week's incident in Ontario, where four members of a Canadian Muslim family of Pakistani origin were killed in what local police said was an attack motivated by anti-Muslim hatred.

"Hate websites which create hatred amongst human beings, there should be an international action against them," Khan told CBC's Rosemary Barton. "Whenever the international community, whenever the world leaders decide upon taking action, this will be dealt with." 

"The problem is, at the moment there is not enough motivation," he said. 

Last week, Pakistan's permanent representative to the UN, Ambassador Munir Akram, announced the Pakistani government's plans to present a resolution against Islamophobia at the UN General Assembly. He admitted, however, to facing resistance from several countries. 

"This will take some time," Akram said. "We need to do a lot of convincing at the UN General Assembly with certain countries which are resisting it, including both some western countries and India, but we are trying to secure it at the general assembly of UN."

Together with the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), Pakistan organized International Day to Combat Islamophobia at the UNGA on March 16.

Islamabad has been lobbying the cause on the international level, especially among Muslim countries, since Khan's government came to power in 2018.


Pakistan, US discuss investment in energy, minerals and counter-terrorism fields

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Pakistan, US discuss investment in energy, minerals and counter-terrorism fields

  • PM Shehbaz Sharif met US State Secretary Marco Rubio, International Development Finance Corporation CEO Benjamin Black
  • The prime minister invites US officials to visit Pakistan at the earliest to explore mutually beneficial investment opportunities

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has discussed investment in Pakistan’s energy, minerals, counterterrorism and other sectors with top United States (US) officials, Sharif’s office said.

The meetings took place on the sidelines of the inaugural meeting of the Gaza Board of Peace in Washington that is intended to oversee international stabilization and rebuilding efforts in Gaza after months of war.

Sharif, accompanied by his deputy Ishaq Dar, met US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who appreciated Pakistan’s ongoing support of Trump’s peace plan for Gaza and for joining the Board of Peace.

“In our meeting, we discussed the importance of our strategic relationship on critical minerals development and counterterrorism,” Rubio said on X after the meeting.

Pakistan has sought to re-energize economic diplomacy with Washington as it attempts to enhance its exports, attract foreign investment and stabilize its economy under an International Monetary Fund-backed reform program.

In July 2025, the two countries agreed to a bilateral trade deal that included reciprocal tariff reductions, while the two sides have increased diplomatic contacts alongside engagements on trade, minerals, security cooperation and regional stability in recent months.

Sharif, who this week traveled to the US on Trump’s invitation, later met US International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) CEO Benjamin Black, who was accompanied by DFC’s Head of Investments Conor Coleman and other senior officials, according to his office.

The prime minister invited Black to visit Pakistan at his earliest convenience to explore mutually beneficial investment opportunities in various sectors of shared interest.

“The Prime Minister appreciated the expanding economic partnership between Pakistan and the United States and recognized DFC’s crucial role in catalyzing joint ventures between private enterprises of the two countries, essential to job creation and productivity enhancement,” Sharif’s office said.

“Highlighting Pakistan’s fast improving macroeconomic fundamentals, Government’s commitment to deepening structural reforms, and attractive investment climate, the Prime Minister invited DFC to enhance its financing for projects in the energy, mines and minerals, agriculture and IT sectors.”

Sharif also invited DFC to participate in the upcoming minerals conference in Islamabad in April.

In Oct., Pakistan dispatched its first ever shipment of rare earth and critical minerals to the United States, a Chicago-based public relations (PR) firm said, following a landmark $500 million deal between the two countries.

The agreement, signed between American firm US Strategic Metals (USSM) and Pakistan’s Frontier Works Organization (FWO), aimed to create a framework for joint development of the entire mineral value chain, including exploration, beneficiation, concentrate production and eventual establishment of refineries in Pakistan.