Gulf News

Three killed as police crack down on hard-line group

DEADLY CLASHES AFTER THE BANNED TEHREEK-E-LABAIK TAKES COPS HOSTAGE

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A crackdown by security forces on protesting supporters of a banned Islamist party left at least three people dead and 20 others injured yesterday, a police official and a party spokesman said.

Lahore police spokesman Rana Arif said supporters of the hard-line Tehreek-e-Labaik Pakistan party attacked police with a petrol bomb and took custody of five police officers, including deputy superinten­dent Umar Farooq Baluch. Arif alleged the officers were tortured.

Police said 11 of the injured were police who needed to be hospitalis­ed.

Shafiq Ameeni, spokesman for Tehreek-e-Labaik, posted a video clip on social media saying that police moved in on the party’s supporters at the group’s offices in Lahore at about 8am.

Multiple casualties

Ameeni said several of the group’s supporters were killed and others wounded in the violence.

Pakistan’s government banned Tehreek-e-Labaik Pakistan last week after supporters took to the streets to protest the arrest of their leader, cleric Saad Rizvi.

Rizvi had called on the government to honour what he said was a commitment it made in February to his party to expel the French envoy over the publicatio­n in France of depictions of Prophet Mohammad. The government said that it only committed to discussing the matter in Parliament.

TLP supports the country’s controvers­ial blasphemy laws and has a history of staging violent rallies to influence the government.

A video clip on social media apparently recorded at the TLP’s offices in Lahore shows images of what appeared to be dead and injured TLP supporters. An injured police officer who identifies himself as Mohammad Umar Farooq says three people were killed and 10 to 15 were injured when police were attacked by enraged protesters.

Tehreek-e-Labaik and other Islamist parties have denounced French President Emmanuel Macron, saying he tried to defend caricature­s of Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) as freedom of expression. Macron’s comments came after a young Muslim beheaded a French schoolteac­her who had shown caricature­s of the Prophet in class.

The images had been republishe­d by the magazine Charlie Hebdo to mark the opening of the trial over the 2015 attack against the publicatio­n for the original caricature­s.

 ?? Reuters ?? ■ Supporters of the banned Islamist political party Tehreek-e-Labaik Pakistan with sticks and stones block a road during a protest in Lahore yesterday.
Reuters ■ Supporters of the banned Islamist political party Tehreek-e-Labaik Pakistan with sticks and stones block a road during a protest in Lahore yesterday.

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