Iran Daily

Pakistan law minister’s resignatio­n triggers party celebratio­n

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Supporters of a Pakistani Islamic party celebrated their victory over the government and called off their sit-in on Monday after the country’s law minister resigned, caving in to the protesters who have been demanding his ouster in a three-week-long rally.

After Zahid Hamid’s resignatio­n, the Tehreek-i-labaik Ya Rasool Allah Party, which was behind the sit-in in Islamabad and protests in other cities and towns across Pakistan, said they were dispersing peacefully under an agreement with the government, AP reported.

The protesters had demanded Hamid’s resignatio­n over an omitted reference to Islam’s Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) in a parliament­ary bill. He apologized for the omission in the bill, saying it was a clerical error that was later corrected.

But the protesters persisted, taking to the streets and setting up their sit-in at the Faizabad intersecti­on on the edge of the Pakistani capital. The protesters effectivel­y blocked the country’s key highway, the Grand Trunk Road motorway, linking Islamabad with the eastern Punjab Province and the northwest, disrupting life and forcing commuters to look for alternate routes.

Clashes erupted on Saturday when riot police tried to disperse the Islamabad sit-in and descended on the protesters with tear gas and batons, leaving six dead and dozens injured.

The violent crackdown also triggered solidarity protests in other Pakistani cities and towns, leading to what could have been a major political crisis that could have paralyzed many urban areas.

Hamid, the law minister, submitted his resignatio­n to Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi late on Sunday after security forces held back from another attempt to disperse the protesters, three security officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to talk to the media.

Interior Minister Ahsan Iqbal told Justice Shaukat Sadiqui of the Islamabad High Court on Monday that the government signed an agreement with the rally organizers to avoid a “civilwar like situation.”

At the Faizabad intersecti­on, jubilant protesters kissed the hand of their leader and party chief, firebrand cleric Khadim Hussain Rizvi, handed out sweets, and chanted, “Prophet, we are here for you.”

In announcing the deal with the government, Rizvi told supporters they “are immediatel­y ending” the rally. He also thanked the Army Chief Gen. Qamar Javed Bajwa for facilitati­ng the agreement, under which Hamid would resign and all detained party activists would be freed.

Rizvi asked his followers to pack up but await the return of their detained activists so they could all go back together to the city of Lahore, the party’s base. Buses lined up near the site amid tight security to take them back to Lahore later Monday.

After Rizvi spoke, security forces began removing shipping containers surroundin­g the sit-in that had meant to prevent the protest from spreading deeper into the city.

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