Pakistani 'officials' are not allowing foreign journalists report the radicalisation of the San Bernardino terrorist in Pakistan.

Pakistan will share information with the US about the San Bernardino shooting in line with the international obligations, the country's interior minister had said on Sunday.

US investigators had identified Tashfeen Malik, a Pakistani woman and her husband Syed Rizwan Farook, of opening firing at a gathering in San Bernardino, on Wednesday, killing 14 people.

But if tweets by Washington Post Pakistan Bureau Chief Tim Craig are to be believed, Pakistani 'officials' are not allowing foreign journalists to report the radicalisation of the San Bernardino terrorist in Pakistan.

According to a report in The Times of India, journalists in Multan, where Malik was trained, have been confined to their hotel and were not been allowed to go out and report.

Pakistani "officials" not letting some journalists out of our hotel in Multan this morning to do reporting — Tim Craig (@timcraigpost) December 6, 2015

The officials have also asked the foreign journalists to go back to Multan:

I am still barred from leaving hotel in Multan and Pakistani "officials" strongly suggest I, as foreign journalist, "go back to Islamabad" — Tim Craig (@timcraigpost) December 6, 2015

I've lost track of how many different security/intel officials I've had to talk to, copy my passport, etc in past 17 hours - think 12 to 16. — Tim Craig (@timcraigpost) December 6, 2015

Another report in Reuters said that three professors from Malik's university had also been advised not to speak to the media.

Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan had said on Sunday that Pakistan will share information with the US administration. "We will help in the investigation," Nisar had said at a news conference in Islamabad.

He said that no US team has met the prime minister in connection with the shooting and rejected 'false reports' in the Western media.

Adding that the US has not taken up the issue with Pakistan thus far, Khan said that some vested interest outside Pakistan wants to defame the country.

Pakistan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs had also condemned what it called the "abhorrent and tragic shooting" incident in San Bernardino in the US state of California in strongest possible terms.

"The loss of precious lives in the tragic incident is irreversible and unfortunate. We hope that the investigations would lead the US authorities to bring the perpetrators and abettors of this act to justice," a ministry statement said.

"The people of Pakistan, being worst victims of terrorism over the years, share the grief of the people of the United States and stand by them in their pain and suffering."

With IANS inputs