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Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan and Army Chief Qamar Javed Bajwa.
With the terror-financing watchdog Financial Action task Force (FATF) set to review Pakistan’s counter-terror financing regime in about a month, Prime Minister (PM) Imran Khan’s administration has put up measures in place to ensure such offences are investigated by specialised agencies, reports Hindustan Times.
The FATF will be holding its plenary from 21-25 June. In the previous plenary meeting of the FATF which was held in bygone February, Pakistan had been retained on the “grey list”. The FATF had then called on the Islamic Republic to complete an action plan to counter terror financing before June.
The FATF had specifically asked Pakistan to show that terror financing investigations and prosecutions were targeting UN-designated terrorists and their proxies, that prosecutions were resulting in effective and dissuasive sanctions, and that targeted financial sanctions against UN-designated terrorists and their proxies were being effectively implemented.
Meanwhile, it should be noted that Prime Minister (PM) Borish Johnson’s administration in the United Kingdom (UK) had recently included Pakistan in its list of “high-risk” nations for terror financing and money laundering.