The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Traffic chaos as protesters block main highway into Pakistan’s capital

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ISLAMABAD: Protesters from a hardline religious group blocked the main highway into Islamabad for the sixth day running, virtually locking down the Pakistani capital and causing commuter fury as authoritie­s hesitated to act.

The roughly 2,000 protesters are demanding the resignatio­n of the federal law minister over a hastily-abandoned amendment to the oath election candidates must swear, a change the demonstrat­ors have linked to blasphemy.

The protesters have camped for nearly a week on a flyover connecting Islamabad with the neighbouri­ng garrison city of Rawalpindi, along which thousands of people commute every day to work in the capital.

Young men armed with clubs are searching anyone approachin­g the protest site and refusing to let vehicles pass, pelting those who come near with stones.

“I have been stuck up on the road for (the) last one and a half hours because of this mess,” said Adnan Iqbal, an employee of a pharmaceut­ical firm who spoke to AFP from the traffic jam where he was late for work.

The protesters, members of the Tehreek-i-Labaik Yah Rasool Allah Pakistan religious group, acted after the government introduced an amendment which altered some wording in the oath where candidates avow that the Prophet Mohammed was the last prophet.

The change was made inadverten­tly, said the government, which quickly reversed it through another amendment.

But the rightwing group insisted it softened that part of the oath and so would allow Ahmadis, a long persecuted Islamic minority sect, to take it. — AFP

 ??  ?? Members of the Tehreek-e-Labaik Pakistan, an Islamist political party, shout slogans during a sit-in in Rawalpindi, Pakistan. — Reuters photo
Members of the Tehreek-e-Labaik Pakistan, an Islamist political party, shout slogans during a sit-in in Rawalpindi, Pakistan. — Reuters photo

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