Summary Nusrat refuted links with RAW, saying such talks are nothing more than propaganda against the party.
LONDON (Dunya News) – Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) leader Nadeem Nusrat refuted all the allegations leveled against MQM and stated that few documents are being used to malign party’s image.
Exclusively talking in Dunya Kamran Khan Kay Sath program, Nadeem Nusrat termed the accusations regarding funding from RAW, money laundering and Scotland Yard’s evidence as Sarfraz Merchant’s documentation.
He asked that how most wanted Sarfraz Merchant has suddenly become trust worthy.
MQM leader has also refuted links with RAW and said that such talks are nothing more than propaganda against the party.
Earlier, Nadeem Nusrat also gave tough time to Pak Sar Zameen Party during a press conference, saying that denouncing his party by distorting facts was injustice and should be stopped.
He also offered that the dissident leaders, who have made their own party after leaving MQM, can only return by apologizing from Altaf Hussain.
Nusrat claimed loyalties of workers were being “forcefully” changed to create space for new competitors.
On Monday, Rabita committee member Ashfaq Mangi on Monday joined Mustafa Kamal’s Pak Sarzameen Party (PSP).
PSP leader Mustafa Kamal while addressing a press conference with Mangi stated he had returned to country in order to stabilise the situation the country faces, adding that "I welcome Ashafaq Mangi in this caravan of nationalists".
Former Karachi nazim Mustafa Kamal, who got elected to the upper house of parliament in 2011, left Pakistan in mid-August in 2013 but came back after three years and launched a new political party to challenge the iron grip of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) on the city.
Mustafa Kamal accused Altaf Hussain of being an Indian agent and a ‘dictatorial drunkard’ who has mismanaged the affairs of Pakistan’s biggest city from his base in north London.
In a blistering attack, Mustafa Kamal also accused Hussain of overseeing an organisation that has turned some activists into “international terrorists”.
The MQM is also under pressure from the paramilitary Rangers force, which launched an armed operation in the southern port city late in 2013 to tackle soaring crime rates. Since then, hundreds of MQM workers have been arrested and a court has issued an arrest warrant for party boss Altaf Husain for threatening the army in a television address.
