Khaleej Times

Protest called off after Pak minister quits

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islamabad — Pakistan’s Law Minister Zahid Hamid resigned on Monday after the embattled government bowed to demands from a small radical group, striking a deal with the help of the military to end a weeks-long anti-blasphemy protest.

At the site of the sit-in which had blocked a major road into Islamabad, demonstrat­ors were slowly packing up tents and walking to bus stops as shops and markets reopened for the first time since the protest began.

Khadim Hussain Rizvi and his supporters from the Tehreek-iLabaik Ya Rasool Allah Pakistan group had paralysed the capital since November 6 with just 2,000 demonstrat­ors, enraging millions of commuters and the judiciary who blasted the government for hesitating to act against them.

The demonstrat­ors demanded the resignatio­n of Zahid Hamid over a hastily-abandoned amendment to the wording of an oath which election candidates must swear. —

islamabad — Pakistan’s law minister resigned on Monday as the embattled civilian government bowed to demands from a small militant group whose protest in the capital has fuelled deadly violence and sparked demonstrat­ions across the nuclear-armed nation.

Protest leader Khadim Hussain Rizvi called off the sit-in after state media reported minister Zahid Hamid’s resignatio­n early on Monday. Rizvi said he had military assurances that the demands of his Tehreek-i-Labaik Ya Rasool Allah Pakistan (TLY) group would be met.

“On the assurance of the Chief of Army Staff, we are calling off the sit-in,” he told a crowd of around 2,500 demonstrat­ors, adding that his group was abandoning plans to issue a fatwa against Hamid and was calling for roads and schools to be reopened.

There was no immediate confirmati­on from the government of the resignatio­n and no comment from the military.

The decision to capitulate to the protesters’ demands is a major embarrassm­ent for the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) as it eyes elections in 2018, analysts said, and underscore­s the influence of religious groups in the nuclear-armed country of 207 million.

Rizvi’s previously obscure group has been calling for weeks for Hamid’s ousting over a hastily abandoned amendment to the oath which election candidates must swear. It has occupied a main highway into Islamabad since November 6 and virtually paralysed the capital.

The protesters have linked the amended wording to blasphemy — a highly contentiou­s charge in Muslim Pakistan which carries the death penalty. Even unproven allegation­s have spurred mob lynchings and murders.

Monday’s announceme­nt came after Saturday’s botched operation to disperse the demonstrat­ors sparked violence in Islamabad that left at least seven people dead and hundreds wounded.

It fuelled the spread of the protests and blockades to major cities

on the assurance of the Chief of army staff, we are calling off the sit-in Khadim Hussain, Leader of Tehreek-e-Labbaik

across the country including Karachi and Lahore. The government ordered police and paramilita­ries to stand down after the clashes and called on the army to intervene to restore order. By Monday morning there still had been no official response from the military.

As he called off the sit-in, Rizvi referred to what he said was the text of an army-brokered agreement between TLY and the government, though the document could not be verified with officials or the military.

“We all now need to heal the fault lines that dharna (sit-in) has invoked on religious & sectarian basis & ensure it doesn’t reoccur. It is a priority,” tweeted Interior Minister Ahsan Iqbal, without further details.

Authoritie­s initially hesitated to act over the sit-in.

Pakistan’s civilian government has long pulled its punches in such situations,

We all now need to heal the fault lines that dharna (sit-in by religious parties) has invoked on religious and sectarian basis and ensure it doesn’t reoccur. It is a priority Ahsan Iqbal, Interior Minister

fearing that a crackdown on a religious group would incite blowback, as it has in the past.

Critics have warned that this attitude allows extremism to flourish. But as the weeks dragged on the hesitation enraged millions of commuters in Islamabad and neighbouri­ng Rawalpindi. The demonstrat­ion caused hours-long traffic snarls and the death of at least one child whose ambulance could not reach hospital in time.

Hamid’s ousting is the latest in a series of heavy blows to the ruling party.

In July Nawaz Sharif was deposed as prime minister by the courts over graft allegation­s, while finance minister Ishaq Dar has taken indefinite medical leave.

Observers had previously warned that capitulati­on would set a dangerous precedent.

“Politicall­y, this is a major em- barrassmen­t for the PML-N,” analyst Hasan Askari told, adding that it would undermine their credibilit­y and predicting more defections.

He also warned it had strengthen­ed the position of hardline groups like TLY. —

 ?? AP ?? An activist distribute­s sweets to fellow protesters following resignatio­n of law minister Zahid Hamid in Islamabad on Monday. —
AP An activist distribute­s sweets to fellow protesters following resignatio­n of law minister Zahid Hamid in Islamabad on Monday. —
 ?? AFP ?? Head of the Tehreek-i-Labaik Ya Rasool Allah, Khadim Hussain Rizvi, speaks during a Press conference regarding talks with the government to end the protest in Islamabad.—
AFP Head of the Tehreek-i-Labaik Ya Rasool Allah, Khadim Hussain Rizvi, speaks during a Press conference regarding talks with the government to end the protest in Islamabad.—
 ?? AFP ?? Zahid Hamid. —
AFP Zahid Hamid. —

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