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US removes curbs on Pakistani diplomats

Pak reciprocates to removal of restrictions on US envoys.

Islamabad: The US has removed restrictions imposed last year on the movement of Pakistani diplomats and diplomatic staff stationed in the country, according to a media report on Thursday.

Under the US restrictions, Pakistani diplomats were banned from moving further than 25 miles from the cities in which they were posted. They were also required to seek permission from the State Department five days in advance if they planned to visit another city.

Pakistan had announced ‘reciprocal’ travel restrictions on US diplomats.

Dawn reported that Islamabad also has restored the facilities that US diplomats had enjoyed in Pakistan until last year.

So far the Foreign Office has not commented on the development which followed the visit of Prime Minister Imran Khan to the US in July.

During Imran Khan’s visit to Washington late in July, foreign minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi said that Islamabad had asked Washington to remove those restrictions, which prevent Pakistani diplomats from performing their duties properly.

Diplomatic tensions between the US and Pakistan heightened in April 2018 when US diplomat Joseph Emmanuel Hall ran a red light in Islamabad, killing a motorcyclist and injuring a passenger.

A court in Islamabad ruled that the American diplomat didn’t have the right to absolute immunity and ordered the government to put his name on the exit control list within two weeks so that he cannot leave the country.

In January 2018, President Donald Trump used his first tweet of the year to criticise Pakistan over its failure to combat terrorism.

Relations between the two countries have improved markedly since Prime Minister Khan's visit to Washington last month.

Since then, the Donald Trump administration has released about $125 million for the renovation and repair of US-built F-16 fighter jets that Pakistan has purchased from the US.

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