India asks IMF to reconsider Pakistan programme over ‘terror funding’

India asks IMF to reconsider Pakistan programme over ‘terror funding’

CHANGES TO Blacklist

Pakistan, which has longer struggled against violence within its borders, has been subject to scrutiny for its ability to combat illegal financing, including financing for violent organizations, and was placed on a watchlist for global money-laundering in 2022.

In 2022, Pakistan was removed from the Financial Action Task Force’s so-called “grey-list” after” major improvement,” including charges being brought against suspected insurgents accused of being involved in the 2008 attacks in India’s Mumbai.

Singh argued that it was” clear that violence and their state are hand in glove with one another in Pakistan.”

” In this circumstance, it’s possible that terrorists could use their radioactive arms.” He claimed that this threat poses a threat to Pakistan as well as the whole world.

Singh on Thursday demanded that Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal be under the watch of the UN’s nuclear power firm, and Islamabad responded by saying that the world community should look into a “black market” of nuclear weapons in India.

According to a speech from Pakistan’s foreign ministry, David Lammy and his Muslim equivalent Ishaq Dar met in Islamabad on Friday to discuss a peace.

It occurred as the state celebrated the military with festivities across the nation.

Pakistan’s military is “resolutely committed to defending every inch of our place,” the statement read. When Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif was in the country on Thursday, he declared,” Any anger may be countered.

The region of Kashmir, which has a Muslim majority, has been the site of numerous conflicts between the two neighbors, who each manage distinct regions of the divided country.

Since 2019, when Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu republican government revoked the state’s minimal freedom and imposed direct rule from New Delhi, militias have increased operations on the American part of Kashmir.