8:38 AM
ISLAMABAD: The Foreign Office on Sunday precluded the foot shaped impressions of the Islamic State (IS) in Pakistan and said no national could be permitted to have joins with the terrorist association. 

"Pakistan has the ability to defeat dangers by any terrorist association, including the Islamic State," Foreign Secretary Aizaz Ahmed Chaudhry said in a meeting with Radio Pakistan. 

Chaudhry said terrorism was on its last wheezes and Pakistan was winning the war on fear with complete backing of the masses. 

Then, Speaker National Assembly Sardar Ayaz Sadiq on Sunday said Pakistan loathed terrorism and radicalism in every one of their indications and it remained behind the general population and the Government of France in the wake of Friday's fear assaults in Paris. 

Tending to a capacity composed by the Foreign Office regarding the yearly bazaar of Pakistan Foreign Office Women's Association, Sadiq said Pakistan, itself a casualty of terrorism for over 10 years, shared the melancholy and torment of the French individuals. 

Sadiq said he had additionally identified with the envoy of France in Islamabad to pass on him the sentiments of parliamentarians and the general population of Pakistan about the sad episode. 

He said from Peshawar to Paris the attitude behind such terrorist exercises was the same and these terrorists were the adversaries of Islam and humankind. 

The speaker said he had composed a letter to his French partner communicating solidarity with the individuals who had lost their lives in terrorist assaults. 

Sadiq said Pakistan had endured colossal misfortunes and lost more than 65,000 individuals in the war against fear. He said the need of great importance was to participate and hold hands against terrorism. 

He called for joint worldwide endeavors to kill terrorism and said Pakistan was willing to stretch out backing to the worldwide group in this battle. 

Tending to the Royal United Services Institute for Defense and Security Studies in London on October 3, armed force boss General Raheel Sharif made it clear that Pakistan would not permit 'even a shadow' of the IS on its dirt and termed the terrorist aggregate a more prominent risk than al-Qaeda. 

"There are individuals in Islamabad who need to demonstrate their steadfastness to the IS. So it's an extremely perilous wonder," General Raheel had cautioned.