OF THE
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Saudi request for help in Yemen sparks political crisis in PakistanAlso see:
Since Monday, Pakistan's parliament has been raucously debating the Saudi request, with a usually fractious opposition uniting against a Pakistani intervention. Several speakers said they consider Saudi Arabia a "brotherly" country but bridled at the suggestion that Pakistan should be dragged into a possibly ruinous foreign war that could worsen relations with Iran and risk further inflaming sectarian tensions at home. Ghulam Ahmed Bilour, a member of the Pashtun nationalist Awami National Party, was angry at the suggestions that the Pakistan army were mere mercenaries. "My army is not a rent-an-army," Bilour said.
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"We demand Nawaz Sharif tell us the truth," Imran Khan, the former cricket legend turn opposition leader, told reporters outside parliament this week. "I don't know what agreement Nawaz Sharif has done in Saudi Arabia. But I do know that the Pakistani people's needs are more deserving than Saudi Arabia's territorial boundary."
Undeniably, Sharif is close to the Saudis. After he was ousted in a military coup in 1999, he found a home in exile in the desert kingdom. Sharif became the first non-Saudi to receive a special economic development loan from the Saudi government to develop a business there. His son is still the owner of a thriving steel mill in Jeddah.
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— Alexis Tsipras (@tsipras_eu) April 9, 2015
Comment: Interesting that Ukraine felt confident it could receive cheaper gas from Europe. Where is Europe getting excess gas to sell? Was this really a pressure play by Naftogaz or merrily a natural fall in prices that changed Kiev's mind?