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Pakistan will defend S. Arabia

Published: 27 Mar 2015 - 06:58 pm | Last Updated: 15 Jan 2022 - 03:14 pm

 

 

 

 

Islamabad---Pakistan is ready to defend Saudi Arabia's "territorial integrity" but has not yet decided to join Riyadh's coalition fighting Yemen rebels, Islamabad's defence minister said Friday.
Saudi Arabia began air strikes in Yemen on Thursday to defend the government of President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi from advancing Shiite Huthi rebels.
Pakistan is a longstanding ally of Saudi Arabia with close military ties, but Islamabad has not yet committed to the operation, which has drawn strong criticism from its neighbour Iran, the major Shiite Muslim power.
Defence Minister Khawaja Asif said the country would defend Saudi sovereignty "at any cost," but appeared to rule out any immediate Pakistani participation in the fighting, which has so far been confined to Yemen itself.
"We don't want to be part of any proliferation, we will try to contain it," Asif told parliament, adding that there was concern it could fan sectarian tensions in Pakistan and the Muslim world.
The Saudi ambassador in Washington said Thursday that Pakistan was among 10 countries ready to join a coalition to protect the Yemeni government.
But Asif said Pakistan's "only pledge is for the territorial integrity of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia" which he said would be defended "at any cost".
He said a delegation would be sent to Saudi Arabia following a two-day Arab League summit this weekend.
Saudi Arabia has said it is ready to do "whatever it takes" to protect Hadi's government but Tehran has slammed the intervention as "a dangerous step".
The White House has voiced concerns about reports of Iranian arms flowing into Yemen and there are fears of the conflict turning into a proxy war between Iran and Saudi Arabia.
Like Saudi, Pakistan has a majority Sunni Muslim population, but around 20 percent of its citizens are Shiite, the world's second-largest such population after Iran.
- Rising sectarian violence -
Sectarian violence, mostly carried out by Sunni hardline militants targeting Shiites, has risen sharply in Pakistan in recent years.
A suicide bomber last month killed 61 people at a Shiite mosque in the southern district of Shikarpur, and at least 1,000 Shiites have been killed in the country over the past two years.
Defence Minister Asif said Pakistan's recent experience showed the danger of sectarian strife.
"We are not and will not fan any conflict that will divide the Muslim world on sectarian lines," he said.
"We will not be part of (such a) conflict, especially when the fault lines are present in Pakistan and we do not want to disturb those fault lines."
Saudi-Pakistan military ties go back decades.
AFP