It seems so, going by a tweet of his Cabinet colleague and Interior Minister Ahsan Iqbal as well as the Foreign Ministry.
On Wednesday, Asif had tweeted that Pakistan had foiled US-led efforts to place it on a terrorist financing watch-list after the country was granted a three-month reprieve by the Paris-based Financial Action Task Force (FATF).
Foreign Minister Asif had tweeted that "our efforts paid" and "no consensus for nominating Pakistan" for the watch-list was reached at the conclusion of meeting on the US-led motion.
Asif said Pakistan was "grateful to friends who helped" to avoid being placed on the watch-list.
Also Read
But Interior Minister Iqbal tweeted today, cautioning against speculation on the matter until there is official confirmation of the FATF decision.
"No official intimation of #FATF decision yet. We should not speculate till official statement is released," Iqbal said.
Pakistan Foreign Office Spokesperson Dr Muhammad Faisal, in a weekly press briefing in Islamabad today, said Pakistan had serious concerns over the motion moved by the US and United Kingdom at the FATF, Radio Pakistan reported.
The Paris-based FATF international watchdog on money laundering and terror financing is going to announce its decisions including on the motion to place Pakistan on the terror-financing watch list after a week-long session concludes today.
The FATF session is being held to review proposals that include putting Pakistan back on a list of countries which have failed to prevent terrorist financing.
If adopted, the resolution would place Pakistan on the FATF grey-list of "jurisdictions with deficient anti-money laundering regimes." Pakistan was previously on the FATF watch-list from 2012 to 2015.
Pakistan had lobbied FATF member countries to keep it off the watch list, the report read.
In the lead-up to the FATF plenary session, Pakistan government took control of three dispensaries run by Hafiz Saeed's Jamaat-ud Dawa (JuD) and the Falah-i-Insaniyat Foundation (FIF) in a rural area near the capital.
Additionally, President Mamnoon Hussain on Feb 9 quietly promulgated an ordinance amending the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997 to end a longstanding ambiguity over the status of the JuD and FIF by firmly placing them on the list of proscribed groups.
Pakistani officials and Western diplomats say being put on the FATF watch-list could deal a blow to Pakistan's economy, making it harder for foreign investors and companies to do business in the country, it said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content