Pakistan committed to eliminate terror: Dar

Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister says Pakistan not diplomatically isolated

Peshawar  -  Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar on Tuesday said that Pakistan was committed to eliminate terrorism.

Referring to the surge in acts of terrorism in Pakistan, the DPM said the menace had almost been eliminated from the country in 2018, however, due to faulty policies of the previous government terrorism resurged in the country.

In this regard, he said that 3o,000 to 40,000 Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) fighters were allowed to enter into Pakistan which was the main factor behind the ongoing terrorist acts.

Without uprooting terrorism,” he added, “the country could not attain the targets of growth and development.” The government was resolutely fighting to wipe out terrorism and bring peace to the affected areas.

Speaking to members of the Pakistani community in New York, he said Pakistan had broken its diplomatic isolation through active diplomacy, with the country’s economy now set to take off as a result of the hard work done by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s government.

“We are no longer isolated,” he said at his two-hour interaction with the Pakistani diaspora.

“Pakistan now has many friends in the international community, we organized two major international events recently — the SCO Summit and the Conference on Girls’ Education in Muslim Communities, with several heads of state visiting the country — Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdo?an being the most recent to express solidarity with the country, Senator Dar added.

He also highlighted Pakistan’s election to the UN Security Council, the world body’s power centre, with a thumping majority o 182 votes for a two-year term —2025-26.

Present at the well-attended occasion were: Ambassador Munir Akram, permanent representative of Pakistan to the United Nations, Ambassador to the United States, Rizwan Saeed Sheikh, Ambassador Asim Iftikhar Ahmad, alternate permanent representative to the UN, and the Consul General in New York, Aamer Atozai.

In his remarks, Senator Dar referred to Pakistan’s ups and downs, pointing out its strong economic position under the leadership of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif between 2013-17, the decline following it that brought the country to the verge of a default and the turnaround led by the present government.

On the economic front, he said that the inflation rate had been reduced from 40 percent to as low as 2.4 percent in January 2025, leading to a decline in the policy rate. Remittances have showed an increase and the exports have risen leading to stability.

The situation would be further consolidated if all the political parties joined hands — without any conditions — keeping the interests of Pakistan above everything else. Pakistan must come first, he added.

He urged Pakistani-American to increase their remittances and invest in projects in their homeland. In this connection, he told them to contact the Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC), a facility to act as a “single window” to help investors, establish cooperation among all government departments, and fast-track project development.

He also expressed confidence that the government recently launched Uran Pakistan programme would achieve all its set targets.

Senator Dar said that Pakistan has bright future — it is blessed with enormous natural resources that successive governments were unable to exploit but now work was in progress to tap them.

Earlier, Ambassador Rizwan Sheikh said that New York has most of the one million Pakistanis living in the United States. They were hardworking, enterprising people and successful in their callings. “You are Pakistani-Americans and will remain Pakistani-Americans,” he said, adding, “You must strengthen that identify,” and continue to promote the interests of Pakistan.

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