Gulf News

Row over Rangers fuels confusion

The force withdraws guards from parliament in a surprise move

-

An unexplaine­d dispute between Pakistan’s interior minister and an elite paramilita­ry unit under his command is adding to political confusion in Islamabad, prompting questions about a rift in ties between civilian leaders and the powerful military.

The spat comes at a moment of heightened concern over the feverish political climate in nuclear-armed Pakistan, which the US seeks to include in its new strategy for South Asia.

Interior Minister Ahsan Iqbal was taken by surprise when the elite Rangers unit, which provides security around parliament, withdrew its guards without explanatio­n on Wednesday.

“I was told the Rangers have unilateral­ly withdrawn from the important installati­ons where they were on duty, which, for us, was shocking,” Iqbal told domestic television channel Dawn News. “This was a gross violation.”

Outside parliament yesterday, the country’s Frontier Constabula­ry was on guard instead. A police official on duty confirmed the Rangers were no longer stationed there.

“The order for them to leave did not come from the interior ministry, it must have come from somewhere else,” said the official, who asked not to be identified because of the sensitivit­y of the topic. Rangers’ officials could not immediatel­y be reached for comment. Iqbal did not immediatel­y respond to Reuters’ telephone calls to seek comment.

The Rangers had this week denied Iqbal entry to a court building where matters relating to an anti-graft case against Sharif were being heard, prompting him to threaten to resign, saying he refused to be “a puppet interior minister”.

The moves follow July’s Supreme Court disqualifi­cation of former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, which he blamed on a conspiracy against him, feeding speculatio­n about a rupture in civilian-military ties.

Senior leaders from Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz (PML-N) party pointed fingers at the country’s military after his disqualifi­cation for not declaring a source of income. The army denies playing a role.

 ?? AFP ?? Ahsan Iqbal
AFP Ahsan Iqbal

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates