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Army summoned to disperse Islamist protesters reports Pakistan media

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Pakistan called in the army to restore order on Saturday, hours after a violent clash between police and crowds protesting an omitted reference to the Prophet Muhammad in a parliamentary bill left six dead and many dozens wounded, state TV reported.

The Interior Ministry did not specify when the troops would be deployed, and no soldiers were visible on the streets late Saturday.

Supporters of an Islamist group have been camped out at a key intersection outside the capital for the last 20 days, and the protest has triggered similar demonstrations across the country.

Hundreds of police in riot gear moved in to clear the intersection linking Islamabad with the garrison city of Rawalpindi after a deadline expired at midnight, doctors at local hospitals said.

The violence sent scores of police and protesters to hospitals with injuries caused by stoning and respiratory problems from tear gas. Hospital officials said near 200 people were hurt, most of them police.

Dr. Masood Safdar of Benazir Bhutto Hospital said five civilians were shot and killed. Dr. Tariq Niazi of the Holy Family Hospital confirmed the death of a young man who was shot in head.

News of the police intervention spread quickly, prompting sympathizers in cities round the country to take to the streets in a show of solidarity with the Islamabad protesters. The situation prompted the country's regulatory body for electronic media to take TV broadcasts off the air. Key social media sites such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube were also blocked. Government officials were not immediately available for comment.

The supporters of the Tehreek-i-Labaik Ya Rasool Allah party, who have been camped out at the intersection for the last 20 days, are demanding the resignation of a law minister over an omitted reference to the prophet in a parliamentary bill. The minister, Zahid Hamid, apologized for the omission — a phrase saying that Muhammad is the last prophet in Islam — saying it was a clerical error that was later corrected.

But protest leaders were adamant and refused to clear the intersection unless the law minister resigned.

http%3A%2F%2Fprod.static9.net.au%2F_%2Fmedia%2F2017%2F11%2F26%2F10%2F59%2F261117pakistan2ev.jpg

Pakistani police on 25 November, cracked down in Islamabad on an anti-blasphemy sit-in by a hardline Islamist group that has been blocking one of the country's key highways for around two weeks demanding the resignation of the country's justice minister Zahid Hamid. The protests had erupted after the Pakistani Parliament approved an amendment to the electoral law on Oct. 2, removing an oath public servants had to take before assuming office, reiterating their belief in Prophet Mohammed as the last prophet of Islam. EPA/RAHAT DAR
Saturday's action came after a court ordered an end to the protest because it was disrupting daily life.

Television footage showed police initially taking control of the bridge where the demonstrators were camped out. Some protesters could be seen throwing stones at police. The images showed an area engulfed in thick smoke from tear gas and black smoke from burned tents.

Later in the morning, seminary students from Rawalpindi reinforced the demonstrators who pushed back police and Frontier Constabulary forces. Witnesses said a group of baton-carrying protesters snatched a tear gas gun and a few shells from a constable and lobbed them at police.

Enraged protesters also torched three police vans, two civilian vehicles, three two motorcycles and damaged two television station vehicles. They also ransacked a newly built metro bus terminal near the venue.

Later in the day, more supporters joined protesters at the site, and civil administrators met to come up with a solution.

Interior Minister Ahsan Iqbal, meanwhile, told state television that the government had shown patience in dealing with the protesters.

"The administration is taking action under court order but still we are open for talks with them," he said, referring to the protesters. Ahsan said that some among the protesters wanted to create chaos and destabilization in the country.

Some protesters who escaped the operation later gathered at a main street in Rawalpindi blocking it and suspending traffic by throwing stones at moving vehicles.

In Karachi, groups gathered at three crucial venues blocking streets in protest against the police action in Islamabad. When police used tear gas to disperse them amid the traffic rush hours, protesters threw stones wounding 20 people, including two journalists.

Protesters also took to the streets in Lahore, Faisalabad, Multan, Khanewal, Layyah, Vihari, Dera Ghazi Khan and others cities in Punjab province and in the northwestern city of Peshawar, as well as in southern city of Hyderabad, to show solidarity with the Islamabad protesters.

In Lahore, an unruly mob torched a vehicle and damaged others with stoning and staged sit-ins at four key areas in the city.

Malik Mohammad Ahmed, the spokesman for Punjab government, said enraged protesters in Rawalpindi attacked the residence of the former interior minister, Chaudhry Nisar, damaging the main gate. He added that they wounded lawmaker Javed Latif in Shaikhupura, hitting him in the head with a stone, and that a furious crowd attacked Law Minister Zahid Hamid's villa in Pasroor, ransacking the place.

https://www.9news.com.au/world/2017...army-summoned-to-disperse-islamist-protesters
 
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instead of killing protestors army should throw away govt like zimbave and appoint president and new governors in all provinces which should be run by governor rule and there should be no elections and politics for indefinite period .this is only way to get out of such situation Pakistan is facing
 
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I think they failed to mention that army had said that they are happy to deploy.


BUT


Govt need to clear few things...

And thus have refused to deploy without actually refusing
 
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instead of killing protestors army should throw away govt like zimbave and appoint president and new governors in all provinces which should be run by governor rule and there should be no elections and politics for indefinite period .this is only way to get out of such situation Pakistan is facing
They did that in 1998. What changed? After 10 years? The fact that your still griping in 2017 tells me nothing changed.
 
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They did that in 1998. What changed? After 10 years? The fact that your still griping in 2017 tells me nothing changed.
today situation is because musharaf himself started doing politics and allowed elections held under nro if he had banned political parties and no elections held today Pakistan is in very good condition
 
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instead of killing protestors army should throw away govt like zimbave and appoint president and new governors in all provinces which should be run by governor rule and there should be no elections and politics for indefinite period .this is only way to get out of such situation Pakistan is facing

That's nuts.
You really think throwing away govt elected by millions of people will solve the issue?

No matter what anyone tells you, an elected govt is a million times better than the alternative. The elected govt has to answer to people & parliament. the alternative does not care and are not answerable to anyone.
 
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I am truly amazed at your patience.
I know. The world is full of retards. Patience is a form of protection against this sea of retardness.

Take this idiot. His making excuses for Musharaf but at the same time imploring the same army that produced Musharaf to take over the country. What makes him think the same cycle will not repeat itself again?

You see Joe, what we have in Pakistan is crisis of leadership. Nobody wants to make a decision other than a decision to make money. Take this fiasco. I don't think most people have quite seen what is being played out. A 200 million people country, 7th largest nuclear stockpile on earth, 3/4 million armed forces yet the capital of this state is blocked off by few religious nutters who are acting with impunity.

The reason the state has not taken action is not because it does not have the means but because it lacks the leadership. If one man in government stood up and took charge by ordering police/FC to send the demonstrators packing it would be over in 24 hours. And the message would be sent to the next bunch "don't do it".

Instead the government had no resolve so it went hiiding behind the judiciary who then gave a apologetic order - not after first giving off a long diatribe about Islam [trying to prove their Islamic credentials] which of course the government did not enforce because no official probably was prepared to enforce the order and thereby be seen as responsible for what would follow. This then leads to the circular tail chasing you see now. court orders government, government goes running to court and so on, on. Total 100% failure in doing anything.

This is where the real war Pakistan now faces. Not India. The day nukes came on the scene that prospect is over. I would love to see what would happen if similar nutters tried to block off Beijing in China, or in Ankara, Turkey. With 24 hours the state would react with lightening iron resolve.

Ps. This lack of resolve is across the board in Pakistan elite. Military, political, judicial, economic. Raheel Sharif showed some spirit but that was exception to the rule. Do you recall how Musharaf prevaricated over the Lal Masjid operation. He was supposed to be a dashing commando. Eventually action came because the Chinese pushed.
 
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Army serves people of Pakistan... not any political dynasty...

Any unlawful orders to kill demonstrators cannot be accepted as order it self is un lawful...

Gov't shud keep it's own act together
 
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I know. The world is full of retards. Patience is a form of protection against this sea of retardness.

Take this idiot. His making excuses for Musharaf but at the same time imploring the same army that produced Musharaf to take over the country. What makes him think the same cycle will not repeat itself again?

You see Joe, what we have in Pakistan is crisis of leadership. Nobody wants to make a decision other than a decision to make money. Take this fiasco. I don't think most people have quite seen what is being played out. A 200 million people country, 7th largest nuclear stockpile on earth, 3/4 million armed forces yet the capital of this state is blocked off by few religious nutters who are acting with impunity.

The reason the state has not taken action is not because it does not have the means but because it lacks the leadership. If one man in government stood up and took charge by ordering police/FC to send the demonstrators packing it would be over in 24 hours. And the message would be sent to the next bunch "don't do it".

Instead the government had no resolve so it went hiiding behind the judiciary who then gave a apologetic order - not after first giving off a long diatribe about Islam [trying to prove their Islamic credentials] which of course the government did not enforce because no official probably was prepared to enforce the order and thereby be seen as responsible for what would follow. This then leads to the circular tail chasing you see now. court orders government, government goes running to court and so on, on. Total 100% failure in doing anything.

This is where the real war Pakistan now faces. Not India. The day nukes came on the scene that prospect is over. I would love to see what would happen if similar nutters tried to block off Beijing in China, or in Ankara, Turkey. With 24 hours the state would react with lightening iron resolve.

Ps. This lack of resolve is across the board in Pakistan elite. Military, political, judicial, economic. Raheel Sharif showed some spirit but that was exception to the rule. Do you recall how Musharaf prevaricated over the Lal Masjid operation. He was supposed to be a dashing commando. Eventually action came because the Chinese pushed.

@Kaptaan, why are you wasting your time and energy on this forum? You belong to a high-powered think tank formulating policy. This brilliant analysis above, for the amount of insight that has been fitted into it - "crammed" would be the wrong word, for inability to convey a sense of the skilled work involved - with an economy of effort really deserves a much higher brand of readership. A readership ideally constituted of the national leadership of an advanced country, willing and capable of dealing with explicated policy essentials.

Please, I beg, introspect a little. You are boxing several classes below your weight.

The last two paragraphs were particularly powerful. Almost jolting.
 
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So these orders should and would be defied...

But still the way forward is democracy...

Few idiots have this dream that army shud take over and install imran niyazi as premiere.... that's also not happening ... if govt goes down niyazi goes down with ppp and pmln and mqm...

But disposing govt is not even an option here

Who decides that?


Read their reply to govt
 
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That's nuts.
You really think throwing away govt elected by millions of people will solve the issue?

No matter what anyone tells you, an elected govt is a million times better than the alternative. The elected govt has to answer to people & parliament. the alternative does not care and are not answerable to anyone.

You are assuming that the government was elected but the reality is the government is made up of corrupt politicians who got to power by rigging elections.
 
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