Home दुनिया Pakistanis in exile have a reason to worry. The threat’s coming from home

Pakistanis in exile have a reason to worry. The threat’s coming from home

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Pakistanis in exile have a reason to worry. The threat’s coming from home

New Delhi: Pakistanis in exile have been cautioned by the UK’s Counter Terrorism Police that their lives are in danger for criticising the Pakistani military, according to a report published in The Guardian. The revelation has brought criticism for the Imran Khan government in Pakistan.

Twitter user Zohra Yusuf said journalists are not safe even in countries where they have sought asylum.

Another user on the microblogging site said the Imran Khan government must come clean on the Guardian report.

An account by the name Syed Tauqeer Bukhari wrote the time had come to talk about the issue.

It was ridiculous to threaten such people, in real life or on social media, wrote a user named Quatrina.

In an apparent jab at the Pakistani establishment, a user addressed the London Police, asking them to “take a good care of your guests”.

In a show of solidarity for Pakistani commentator Ayesha Siddiqua, Professor of Politics at the University of Nottingham, Katharine Adeney wrote that for the likes of Ayesha, the “sense of being secure is gone”. According to the Guardian report, a lawyer had told Siddiqua that British-based Pakistani drug gangs could be involved in targeting her.

The alert for the Pakistanis in exile comes after a London-based hitman was recently found guilty of conspiracy to murder a Pakistani dissident. According to reports, Muhammad Gohir Khan was arrested for allegedly receiving money offers for the murder of blogger Ahmed Waqas Goraya, who had criticised the ISI.

Days before the trial began last month, officials from Counter Terrorism Policing visited the UK home of Pakistani political commentator Rashid Murad, in a bid to review security.

Murad told the Guardian that two police officers had visited his house and told him that some people were planning to harm him. They indicated the threat was from Pakistani authorities.

In the Guardian report, lawyer Fazal Khan has also been described on the target of Pakistani authorities. Fazal said he was also informed by the UK authorities and told that he would have to inform the police if he wanted to travel outside London. He also said that the authorities had also discussed the death of Karima Baloch, who campaigned for an independent Balochistan and was found dead in a Canadian lake in 2020.

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