Eastern Eye (UK)

French envoy’s ouster debate ends in chaos

PROTESTS WEAKEN AFTER RESOLUTION IN PAKISTAN PARLIAMENT

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PAKISTAN’S parliament last Friday (23) again deferred debating the fate of the French ambassador, with the government seemingly putting a lid on bloody anti-France protests that rocked the country for a week.

A resolution tabled last Wednesday (21) called for the national assembly to debate whether to expel the French envoy, for the assembly to condemn Western blasphemy, for Muslim nations to unite on the issue, and for authoritie­s to provide space in cities for future protests. But last Friday’s session descended into rowdiness after members disagreed on how to proceed – with some chanting antiFrench slogans and others displaying a poster calling for the envoy to be booted out. The speaker adjourned the session indefinite­ly. Still, the resolution appears to have taken the steam out of an anti-France campaign waged for months by the Tehreek-i-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) since president Emmanuel Macron defended the right of a satirical magazine to republish cartoons depicting the Prophet Mohammed – an act deemed blasphemou­s by many Muslims.

Supporters of the upstart radical party protested violently across the country last week when its leader was arrested after calling for a march on the capital to demand the French envoy’s expulsion.

As the protests grew, the French embassy recommende­d all its citizens leave the country – a call that appeared to go largely unheeded.

Interior minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed – who negotiated an end to the protests with TLP leaders – said five police officers and eight protesters were killed. Protesters also held hostage 11 police officers and two special rangers for hours, before releasing them bruised and bloodied.

Despite the TLP being banned last week under anti-terror laws – and its leader’s continued detention – party elders last Tuesday (20) called off further action. “We have not given anything away,” informatio­n

minister Fawad Chaudhry conference last Wednesday.

“They have realised the state is serious,” added human rights minister Shireen Mazari.

Prime minister Imran Khan has in the past been accused of appeasing the TLP, fearful of antagonisi­ng Pakistan’s conservati­ves. Last Monday (19) he had pleaded with the group to end its violent campaign to oust the French ambassador, saying the unrest was harming the nation. “It doesn’t make any difference to France,” he said on television.

“If we keep protesting our whole lives we would only be damaging our own country, and it will not impact (the West).”

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 ??  ?? OUTRAGE: Lawyers take part in an anti-France demonstrat­ion in Karachi last Saturday (24); (inset above) Sheikh Rashid Ahmed
OUTRAGE: Lawyers take part in an anti-France demonstrat­ion in Karachi last Saturday (24); (inset above) Sheikh Rashid Ahmed

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