Pakistan blocks US diplomat from leaving amid tense relations
CGTN
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Pakistani authorities have prevented an American diplomat involved in a fatal traffic accident from leaving the country, local media reported on Saturday.
The decision forced a US military aircraft flown in for his departure to leave without him. 
The move came a day after Pakistan said it would restrict the movements of all American diplomats in the country in response to Washington’s similar restrictions on Pakistani embassy diplomats.
A spokesman for the US embassy in Islamabad declined to comment on the media reports, and a US State Department spokesperson in Washington would neither confirm nor deny them.
A Pakistani policeman walks past a car of an American diplomat parked inside a police station after an accident in Islamabad, April 8, 2018. /VCG Photo

A Pakistani policeman walks past a car of an American diplomat parked inside a police station after an accident in Islamabad, April 8, 2018. /VCG Photo

“For the privacy and security of those involved, we cannot disclose the diplomat’s current location,” the State Department spokesperson said.
Pakistan is a crucial link to supplying American troops fighting the Taliban in neighboring Afghanistan. But Washington has long believed it actually shelters the Taliban’s leaders, and President Donald Trump has cut off military aid in an effort to pressure Pakistan.
The latest blow to relations came on Saturday, when Pakistani authorities banned a US military attache from leaving as planned, Pakistan’s The Nation and Express Tribune newspapers reported.
A day earlier, an Islamabad court had ruled his diplomatic immunity may not apply in the April 7 traffic accident in which the US attache’s vehicle hit a motorcycle, killing the 22-year-old driver, both papers reported. 
Pakistani students of Karachi University burn US and Israeli flags during a demonstration on April 17, 2018, in Karachi. /VCG Photo

Pakistani students of Karachi University burn US and Israeli flags during a demonstration on April 17, 2018, in Karachi. /VCG Photo

As a result, a US Air Force C130 flown in to Pakistan’s Nur Khan air base outside Islamabad was forced to leave without him on Friday, Geo TV and the two newspapers reported.
Separately, Pakistan’s foreign ministry said it would apply travel restrictions to all US diplomatic staff similar to those applied by Washington, according to a notification sent to the US Embassy on Friday and obtained by Reuters.
The new US rules require diplomats to obtain permission to travel more than 40 kilometers (25 miles) from their stations, the local Dawn newspaper reported.
The US State Department on Saturday confirmed the new restrictions on its employees in Pakistan but declined further comment.
“We are in regular communication with our Pakistani counterparts. We do not discuss details of diplomatic conversations,” the spokesperson said.
US-Pakistani relations have deteriorated significantly since the beginning of the year, when Trump abruptly announced in a tweet a cutoff of military aid, which he said treated the United States with “nothing but lies and deceit” for 15 years.
(Top image: Pakistani protesters carry placards during a demonstration on April 25, 2018, against the killing of a local resident in a car accident involving a US diplomat in Islamabad.  /VCG Photo)
Source(s): Reuters