The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Pakistan anti-France protesters clash with police for second day

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LAHORE, Pakistan: Thousands of supporters of a Pakistan extremist party clashed with police for a second day Tuesday, demanding the release of their leader who was arrested after calling for the French ambassador to be kicked out of the country.

Police said two officers died after being wounded in clashes in Lahore, the country’s secondbigg­est city, while the Tehreeke-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) said three of its supporters were killed.

Police have not commented on the reported TLP deaths.

Protesters spilled into the streets in anger at Monday’s arrest of TLP leader Saad Rizvi, with major intersecti­ons also blocked in the capital Islamabad.

Rizvi was taken into custody hours after calling for a march next week on the capital to again demand the expulsion of the ambassador over France’s support for a magazine’s right to republish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed — an act deemed blasphemou­s by many Muslims.

Police said he had been charged under anti-terrorism laws.

“A group or party shouldn’t even think of dictating the state’s policy,” Fawad Chaudhry, the science and technology minister, told reporters, calling for the protests to be resolved peacefully.

Health officials in Punjab province, of which Lahore is the capital, have appealed to protesters not to disrupt critical oxygen supplies for Covid-19 patients.

Punjab pandemic pointman Asad Aslam said several hospitals had faced oxygen shortages Monday night, but the situation had stabilised after roads were cleared by authoritie­s.

“Please do not block roads for ambulances and for visitors to the hospitals. Some ambulances are carrying oxygen cylinders, which are extremely essential for Covid patients,” leading Punjab health official Yasmin Rashid said, after calling Monday night’s disruption a “crisis”.

Pakistan is in the grip of a deadly third wave of the coronaviru­s pandemic with a shortage of vaccines.

The TLP are notorious for days-long road protests that have brought large swathes of the country to a standstill over the years. The nation has a long history of avoiding confrontat­ion with hardline Islamist groups, fearing any crackdown on religious parties could spark wider violence in the deeply conservati­ve Islamic republic.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) party throw stones over the police armoured vehicle during a protest in Barakahu neighbourh­ood of Islamabad.
— AFP photo Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) party throw stones over the police armoured vehicle during a protest in Barakahu neighbourh­ood of Islamabad.

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