News of tensions between Pakistan and Saudi Arabia has been circulating for some time and now the foreign news website 'alaraby.co.uk' has made a frightening claim. The website said in a report that the rift in relations between Pakistan and Saudi Arabia has forced the Saudi government to support former Army Chief General (retd) Raheel Sharif over Prime Minister Imran Khan and the Saudi government She wants to replace Imran Khan as Prime Minister. The website made the claim based on some Pakistani and Indian media reports that the Saudi government had appointed General Raheel Sharif, commander of the Saudi-led Islamic Military Coalition, as Pakistan's prime minister. She is preparing for the presidency and has become the Saudi government's preferred candidate for prime minister. According to the report, there were traditional relations between Pakistan and Saudi Arabia but the issue of Occupied Kashmir became bitter. Pakistan accused Saudi Arabia of inaction on the issue of occupied Kashmir and repeatedly demanded that it convene a meeting of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation to highlight the Kashmir issue and put pressure on India. Fed up with Pakistan's demand, the Saudi leadership cut off 6. 6.2 billion in loan installments and oil supplies to Pakistan and demanded an early repayment of the 1 1 billion already paid. On August 17, Army Chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa also visited Saudi Arabia. A few days before the visit, a statement was issued by the Pakistani Foreign Ministry in which he expressed the OIC's response to the Kashmir issue. appreciate of its. On the other hand, Prime Minister Imran Khan last week strongly denied the tension between Pakistan and Saudi Arabia. In an interview to private TV channel Dunya News, Prime Minister Imran Khan said, "Our relations are very good and we are in constant touch with each other. There is an opinion on the Kashmir issue that the Organization of Islamic Cooperation Should have come, however, Saudi Arabia has its own foreign policy. So we should not think that the Saudi government will do what we want. "
0 Comments