The 37-nation FATF at its plenary meeting in Paris last week placed Pakistan on a watch list of the countries where terrorist outfits are still allowed to raise funds.
Though Pakistan has not been named, it has to submit the action plan to implement UN Security Council resolutions on anti-money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism by April, failing which it would figure in the list.
Foreign Office spokesman Dr Mohammad Faisal, during his weekly briefing, also confirmed that "Pakistan will be assigned to the 'grey list' in June, once an action plan has been mutually negotiated".
Faisal said that Pakistan, over the last few years, took a number of measures to address these issues, including through enactment of legislations, issuance of regulations and guidelines to the financial sector, establishment of the Financial Monitoring Unit and implementation of UNSC 1267 sanctions on the entities of concern like Jamat-ud-Dawa (JuD) and Falah-i-Insaaniyat (FIF).
The US officials had said that JuD leader and Mumbai terrorist attack mastermind Hafiz Saeed and his "charities" were top on the list of the groups that the FATF wanted Pakistan to act against.
Pakistan was in touch with the US, and Lisa Curtis, Senior Director for South and Central Asia at US National Security Council visited Pakistan on February 26 and met Foreign Secretary (Tehmina Janjua), he said.
"We continue to get differing signals from different parts of the US Government... Pakistan has made immense efforts to address issues related to counter-terrorism. We continue to ask the US for actionable evidence," Faisal said.
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