MQM officials told UK investigators they had received money from the Indian government, the BBC has learned.
A Pakistani official also told the BBC that India has trained hundreds of MQM militants over the past 10 years.
Indian authorities say the claims made to the BBC are "completely baseless". The MQM also denies them.
Party
spokesman Saif Muhammad Ali told BBC Urdu that the MQM had never
received any funding or training from India. He said authorities in
Pakistan were running a campaign against the party.
Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan, Pakistan's interior minister, said on Thursday he would write to the British government on Friday.
He said they had a duty to "extend as much help as possible" to Pakistan on the investigation.
With
24 members in the National Assembly, the Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM)
has long been a dominant force in the politics of Pakistan's largest
city, Karachi.
They
told investigators the party was receiving Indian funding, the BBC was
told. UK authorities also found a list of weapons in an MQM property.
A
Pakistani official told the BBC that India has trained hundreds of MQM
militants in explosives, weapons and sabotage over the past 10 years in
camps in north and north-east India.
Before 2005-2006, the training was given to a small number of mid-ranking members of the MQM, the official said.
More recently, greater numbers of more junior party members have been trained, the BBC was told.
The
claims follow the statement of a senior Karachi police officer in April
that two arrested MQM militants said they had been trained in India.
Asked
about the claims of Indian funding and training of the MQM, the Indian
High Commission in London said: "Shortcomings of governance cannot be
rationalised by blaming neighbours."
The
UK authorities started investigating the MQM in 2010 when a senior
party leader, Imran Farooq, was stabbed to death outside his home in
north London.
In
the course of those inquiries, the police found around £500,000
($787,350) in the MQM's London offices and in the home of Mr Hussain.
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