No Saudi wish-list handed to Pakistan: Nawaz Sharif

LONDON (Web Desk/Agencies) – Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on Friday dismissed the notion Saudi Arabia has slapped a ‘wish-list’ on Pakistan, but said the Holy Kingdom has been held out assurances that Pakistan will stand shoulder-to-shoulder if it’s territorial integrity was threatened in any way.

“Pakistan did not receive any diktat from King Salman, Sharif told reporters at Heathrow Airport, “We told our brotherly nation that Pakistan will never leave them alone in the hour of need.”

Later Sharif went to London on a three-day visit, where he will call on his British counterpart, David Cameron, speak at an international conference, and hold meetings with the top UK businessmen of Pakistani origin.

A day earlier, Sharif accompanied by army chief General Raheel Sharif and Defence Minister Khawaja Asif met with King Salman and other top government officials in Riyadh.

“The main focus was for solidarity with Saudi Arabia” in line with earlier commitments from Islamabad to defend the kingdom’s territorial integrity, the official told AFP.

A Saudi-led coalition conducted a 27-day campaign of air strikes in Yemen aimed at halting the advance of Iran-backed Shiite Huthi rebels and their allies.

On Tuesday night the coalition said it was starting a new phase aiming to resume Yemen’s political process, deliver aid and fight “terrorism,” as air strikes continued.

Nuclear-armed Pakistan has remained ostensibly neutral in the conflict.

The Huthis, allied with army units loyal to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh, are fighting forces on the side of coalition-backed President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi, whose government has sought refuge in Riyadh.

Pakistan’s parliament this month unanimously voted against complying with Sunni-dominated Saudi Arabia’s request for troops, warplanes and ships.

Parliament said Pakistan should instead play a mediating role.

In a unanimous resolution it backed the government’s commitment to protect Saudi territory, which was not directly threatened during the conflict although there were armed skirmishes along the border.

The Pakistani official said parliament’s decision was “not at all” a point of contention with the Saudis.

“The two countries have the type of relations which are pretty mature. They understand what parliament’s position was,” he said, asking for anonymity.

Saudi Arabia’s official press agency only said talks covered bilateral, regional and other issues.

Pakistan has deep military ties with Saudi Arabia and has long benefited from the oil-rich kingdom’s largesse.

But it has been reluctant to become ensnared in a conflict with sectarian overtones while violence against minority Shiites rises at home.

Shiites comprise about 20 percent of Pakistan’s population.

Some analysts saw Sharif’s trip as an attempt to pacify the Saudi royal family, with whom he has close personal ties after they sheltered him during his years in exile.

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