ISLAMABAD: Pakistan's army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa will visit Saudi Arabia this week, Pakistani and international media have reported.
A security source confirmed to Arab News the army chief’s plans to travel to Riyadh this week but declined to be named or to provide specific details.
“Yes he is travelling,” Pakistan army spokesperson Major General Babar Iftikhar told Reuters, adding that the visit was pre-planned and “primarily military affairs oriented.”
The army chief will be visiting Saudi Arabia at a time when statements by Pakistani foreign minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi over the Organization of Islamic Countries (OIC) being lukewarm on the Kashmir territorial dispute created controversy last week.
Pakistan has long demanded that the OIC convene a high-level foreign minister’s meeting to highlight alleged Indian rights violations in the part of Kashmir it controls. But the OIC has only held low-level meetings so far.
On August 10, Nawaf Saeed Al-Malkiy, the ambassador of Saudi Arabia to Pakistan, also met with Gen Bajwa and discussed the security situation in the region.
Pakistan and Saudi Arabia are longtime allies. Saudi Arabia remains the main source of Pakistan’s remittances despite global business shutdowns amid the coronavirus pandemic. In 2018, the Kingdom gave Pakistan a $3 billion loan and $3.2 billion oil credit facility to help stave off a balance of payments crisis.
On Wednesday, Special Adviser to the PM on Petroleum Division, Nadeem Babar, said Pakistan had requested Saudi Arabia to renew the deferred payment facility for oil supplies after a one-year agreement between the two countries expired in May.