San Antonio Express-News

After violent standoff, Pakistan makes deal with Islamist militants

- By Salman Masood

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Pakistan averted a political showdown Monday as officials reopened a key national highway that supporters of a militant Islamist group had occupied for days, following a secret pact between the government and the group.

The agreement defused a crisis that had left the country reeling in recent days, the latest in a series of debilitati­ng standoffs with Islamist hard-liners protesting perceived blasphemy. But it also illustrate­d the growing influence and power of such groups, including Tehreek-e-labaik Pakistan, or TLP, which Pakistan banned as a terrorist organizati­on in April, and the weak civilian government’s struggle to assert itself amid economic troubles and rising inflation.

“Just because the government has reached an ‘agreement’ with the TLP, it does not mean that such public outcry against blasphemy will not raise its head again,” said Saad Rasool, a constituti­onal lawyer and newspaper columnist.

After a violent, days-long face-off with members of TLP that left four police officers dead, the Pakistani government announced Sunday that it had entered into an agreement with the group but did not disclose the terms publicly. Many of the group’s supporters remained on the national highway, hoping to pressure the government to follow through on the promises made in the agreement.

The latest standoff began Oct. 21, when thousands of supporters of TLP began marching toward Islamabad from Lahore, 240 miles away. They demanded the release of the group’s leader, Saad Hussain Rizvi, who was arrested in April, and the withdrawal of terrorism charges against hundreds of its members.

The group also demanded the expulsion

of the French ambassador over cartoons published in France that depicted the Prophet Muhammad. The government of Prime Minister Imran Khan had agreed to put the question of expulsion to a parliament­ary vote last spring but did not follow through.

Violent clashes last week between protesters and the police left the four officers dead and 114 other officers wounded, some critically.

After the police failed to stop the marchers — many of them armed — paramilita­ry troops were called in to quell the violence.

By Friday, the protesters were camped along a key national highway, a portion of the Grand Trunk Road that is roughly 100 miles south of Islamabad, where paramilita­ry troops cautioned them against advancing farther.

Khan’s government initially adopted a tough stance, with some Cabinet ministers saying the protest would not be tolerated. The protesters paid

little heed and vowed to press ahead.

The unrest paralyzed several cities in Punjab province, as authoritie­s used shipping containers to barricade highways and blocked internet services. Businesses were shut down around the Grand Trunk Road, one of the busiest national highways and an artery to several industrial cities. Supply lines were choked, officials said, affecting food relief campaigns to neighborin­g Afghanista­n.

As fears grew of an escalation in violence over the weekend, hectic meetings took place between the government and TLP, brokered by senior religious figures.

As part of the pact, the terms of which were widely reported by local media, TLP dropped its demand that Pakistan cut off diplomatic ties with France. In exchange, the government agreed to release members of the group who had been imprisoned and not bring new charges against the group’s leaders. It also agreed to lift its ban against the group.

 ?? / Associated Press ?? Supporters of Tehreek-e-labiak Pakistan, a radical Islamist party, celebrate after capturing a police vehicle during a protest march.
/ Associated Press Supporters of Tehreek-e-labiak Pakistan, a radical Islamist party, celebrate after capturing a police vehicle during a protest march.

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