Islamabad: Pakistan under the government of Imran Khan has come down to radicalization even then struggling with a towering economic crisis and bad human rights records.
Imran Khan has eliminated its goodwill with MollyCoddling extremist groups such as Pakistan Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistani (TLP), and Afghan Taliban, according to International Think Tanks based in Canada – International Forum and Security.
Former Head of the Pakistani National Counter Terrorism Authority, Khawaja Khalid Farooq, recently wrote in a sharp article in international news that the brutality of the hordes, such as Lynching from Sri National Activities in Punjab in December last year, showed the extent to which radicalization affected the community sir.
Known during the ‘Taliban Khan’, the prime minister supports the rise of Taliban in neighboring Afghanistan and praised their military victory as an Islamic victory as soon as they have power.
The shout of victory was short-lived, when he realized that he had been, like his predecessor, encouraged extremist groups, which would only be further radicalized in his country and the region, according to the International Forum for his rights and security.
Furthermore, one of the traps of his Afghan victory was an agreement that he had to consider to TTP, a terrorist group was raised by Pakistani forces a few years ago to play a cunning game with Taliban and the US.
However, the group turned around with soldiers and countries and found refuge with the Taliban in Afghanistan, according to international forums for rights and security.
The second ‘famous’ deal that he had with extremism was the way he allowed Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistani phone to run on the streets of Pakistan.
Furthermore, TLP was in a surge after the release of its leader Saad Hussin Rizvi last November and revoked his prohibition by the Government Imran Khan.
Furthermore, extremist groups have always been an integral part of Pakistani society since independence and its sustainable contribution to the process of mass thought has greatly influenced the transformation of the nation, according to international forums for rights and security.