The Day

Radical Pakistani religious cleric dies after leading sit-in

- By BABAR DOGAR and ASIM TANVEER Tanveer reported from Islamabad. Associated Press writer Kathy Gannon in Islamabad contribute­d to this report.

Lahore, Pakistan — Khadim Hussein Rizvi, a radical Pakistani religious scholar who this week led thousands of supporters into a sit-in in Islamabad over the republishi­ng in France of caricature­s of the Prophet Muhammad, which they deem blasphemou­s, died on Thursday. He was 54.

According to the cleric’s spokesman and a doctor at the hospital where Rizvi was taken to in the eastern city of Lahore, he was showing symptoms similar to those of COVID-19 but had not been tested for the coronaviru­s.

The doctor, Salman Ahmed, said Rizvi had had a high fever for four days and developed serious respirator­y problems on Thursday. He was then taken to the hospital where he died.

The protest by Rizvi’s party, the Tehreek-e-Labiak, started Sunday on the outskirts of the capital, Islamabad, where protesters and Pakistani security forces briefly clashed, prompting the police to fire tear gas at stone-hurling demonstrat­ors. The rally was one in a series held around the country to express outrage over the caricature­s.

After the violence in Islamabad died down, the protesters subsequent­ly staged a sit- in that ended early Tuesday after Prime Minister Imran Khan’s government promised their demands for cutting diplomatic ties with France and expelling the French ambassador would be discussed in Parliament in three months.

The sit- in had attracted thousands of men who sat for two days, crowded together with few wearing face masks.

Tehreek-e-Labiak spokesman Shafiq Amini said the government had also agreed to release all arrested members of the party.

The radical Islamist party gained prominence in Pakistan’s 2018 federal elections, campaignin­g on a single-point agenda: defending the country’s controvers­ial blasphemy law which calls for the death penalty for anyone who insults Islam. The party won only two provincial seats in the southern Sindh province, though Rizvi’s rallies typically attracted tens of thousands.

In conservati­ve Pakistan, the mere charge of blasphemy can incite mobs to riot. Rizvi also led the protests last year, when Khan’s government freed Aasia Bibi, a Christian woman held on death row for eight years on charges of committing blasphemy. A court acquitted her but she had to flee to Canada after threats to her life.

The prophet caricature­s have sparked protests in Asia and the Middle East, with calls for boycott of French products.

They were also seen as the trigger for several deadly attacks against French nationals and interests in recent weeks.

Tehreek-e-Labiak has a history of staging protests and sit-ins to press their demands. In November 2017, its followers staged a 21-day protest and sit-in after a reference to the sanctity of the Prophet Muhammad was removed from the text of a government form.

Khan tweeted his condolence­s on Rizvi’s death while Minister for Religious Affairs Peer Noor ul Haq Qadi called the cleric “a great Islamic scholar and lover of the Prophet.”

Rizvi’s funeral is expected to draw tens of thousands of people at a time when coronaviru­s cases in Pakistan have been climbing steadily. Pakistan has reported more than 365,900 cases of the virus and 7,248 deaths.

 ?? ANJUM NAVEED/AP PHOTO ?? In this Nov. 26, 2017 file photo, Khadim Hussein Rizvi, head of ‘Tehreek-e-Labaik Pakistan, a religious political party, speaks during a press conference in Islamabad, Pakistan.
ANJUM NAVEED/AP PHOTO In this Nov. 26, 2017 file photo, Khadim Hussein Rizvi, head of ‘Tehreek-e-Labaik Pakistan, a religious political party, speaks during a press conference in Islamabad, Pakistan.

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