Pakistani information minister says no confusion those who kill innocents are ‘terrorists’

Pakistan Minister for Science and Technology Fawad Chaudhry during an interview with Arab News in Islamabad, Pakistan June 12, 2020. (AN photo)
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Updated 22 June 2021
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Pakistani information minister says no confusion those who kill innocents are ‘terrorists’

  • Fawad Chaudhry’s comments come days after FM Qureshi drew slack for comments in TV interview that were widely seen as appeasing militants
  • PM Imran Khan came under fire last year after telling parliament Osama bin Laden was a “martyr“

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani Information Minister Fawad Chaudhry said on Monday there was no confusion those who killed innocent people were “terrorists,” two days after the foreign minister of the country drew slack for TV comments about Al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden and the Afghan Taliban that were widely seen as appeasing militants.
Bin Laden, the mastermind of the 9/11 attacks, was killed in 2011 by US Navy Seals who raided his hideout in the Pakistani garrison town of Abbottabad.
In an interview with Afghanistan’s TOLOnews that was run on June 19, Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi said: “I’ll let that pass” when asked if Bin Laden was a “martyr.”
The interviewer referred to Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan’s June 2020 comments before parliament that the US had “martyred” Bin Laden.
On Monday, the Pakistani information minister took to Twitter and in a post in which he hash-tagged TOLOnews, said:
“There is no confusion at any level re anyone who kills innocents. That is terrorism and the perpetrators are terrorists. We [Pakistan] have suffered pain of terrorism in our own land and can understand pain of all who have lost their loved ones in these cowardly attacks.”

The minister’s comment was seen as a veiled reference to Qureshi’s remarks from the TOLOnews interview, particularly when he was asked by the interviewer to define the Taliban — “students, insurgency, terrorist group?” — and kept saying that they were Afghans.
“Who are the Taliban? You have a definition?” the interview asked. “The Afghans,” Qureshi said several times, and then when pushed that some Afghans were “terrorists” while others were not, the Pakistani foreign minister added:
“Depends who’s looking at things how? At times, people are dubbed as terrorists, at times people are seen and viewed and they proclaimed to be an element fighting for an occupation, wanting freedom of their land. So depends how you look at it.”
The interview has drawn widespread condemnation on social media:


Bodies of Pakistani nationals who died attempting illegal migration repatriated from Iran

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Bodies of Pakistani nationals who died attempting illegal migration repatriated from Iran

  • Pakistan’s envoy in Tehran warns youth against human smugglers after deaths in harsh weather
  • Pakistan reported sharp fall in illegal migration to Europe this year amid nationwide crackdown

ISLAMABAD: The bodies of two Pakistani nationals, who died near the Iran-Türkiye border after attempting to travel illegally to Europe, have been repatriated to the country, said a senior diplomat on Tuesday, reiterating warnings against human smugglers amid an intensified crackdown by authorities in Islamabad on illegal migration.

Pakistan says it has stepped up action against illegal immigration and human trafficking in recent years, reporting a 47% drop in illegal migration to Europe this year and the arrest of more than 1,700 suspected human smugglers, according to official figures.

However, people continue to attempt dangerous irregular journeys in search of work and better economic opportunities abroad.

“The mortal remains of Pakistani nationals Mr. Armanullah s/o Gul Rahman and Mr. Ihtasham s/o Mukhtar Gul, both residents of Nowshera, have been repatriated to Pakistan through Taftan border earlier today,” Pakistan’s ambassador to Iran, Muhammad Mudassir Tipu, said in a post on social media platform X. “Both had fallen victim to the greed of human smugglers and lost their lives in extremely harsh weather conditions near Iran’s border with Turkiye.”

“I once again request the youth back home not to be trapped by human smugglers and instead follow the legal path to travel abroad,” he added, thanking the government of the Balochistan province in Pakistan for arranging the transportation of the bodies and offering condolences to the victims’ families.

The issue illegal immigration has drawn heightened scrutiny since 2023, when hundreds of people, including Pakistani nationals, died attempting to cross the Mediterranean Sea in an overcrowded vessel that sank off the Greek coast, prompting Islamabad to launch nationwide investigations into human smuggling and trafficking networks.

Authorities have since arrested Pakistani and foreign nationals at airports with forged travel documents, highlighting the scale of document fraud linked to illegal departures.

In September, the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) released a list of more than 100 of Pakistan’s “most wanted” human smugglers and identified major trafficking hubs across Punjab province and the capital, Islamabad.

Earlier this month, Pakistan announced plans to roll out an artificial intelligence-based immigration screening system at Islamabad airport from January, aimed at detecting forged documents and preventing illegal travel abroad, as part of broader efforts to curb human smuggling and unauthorized migration.