The Consul General Owns a Personal House and Business in Nowshera
The general consul of Afghanistan has been declared as persona non grata.
There have been reports of the Consulate General humiliating Afghan people.
PESHAWAR
GHAG Report
Persona non grata status for Afghan Consul General Mohibullah Shakir in Peshawar is allegedly being reviewed by Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry, according to diplomatic sources. While the Afghan government has reportedly offered a peculiar explanation for the Consul General and his deputy’s noncompliance with protocol during Pakistan’s national anthem at the ceremony, some concerned officials in Kabul have reportedly also voiced their disapproval of their diplomats’ actions. And to their surprise, the chief minister of the ruling party in the province seemed to support the “act” of the Afghan diplomats.
In this context, the PTI social media accounts initiated a regular campaign to defend Afghan diplomats, and the Chief Minister, in his capacity as the province’s chief executive, led by an example by publicly justifying this action. A spokesman for the Foreign Ministry stated that Kabul would file a formal protest against the action, which she said went against diplomatic protocol. However, it has come to light that Afghan Consul General Mohibullah Shakir not only possesses a home of his own in Nowshera, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, but it is also a hub for his business.
The two diplomats have lived in Akora Khattak and Nowshera with their families for a considerable amount of time, according to senior analyst Hamad Hassan, who also stated in a vlog that they have previously held significant organizational roles for the Taliban. He claims that among other things, Consul General Mohibullah Shakir is wary of his Afghan inhabitants. A while back, when the elders of the refugees came to see him with a delegation, the Consul General startled and infuriated him by declaring that, if they were Afghans, they ought to return to their country of origin. A few additional publications asserted that the two ambassadors engaged in “undesirable activities” beyond engaging in illicit commerce.