Police fire tear gas at Pakistan cleric supporters
PAKISTAN: Police fired tear gas during isolated clashes at a
protest rally in Islamabad Tuesday, where thousands led by an influential
cleric demanded a peaceful “revolution” and the dissolution of parliament.
Men, women and children answered a call by
Canadian-Pakistani cleric Tahir-ul Qadri to converge on parliament after
camping out in the capital overnight following a 38-hour march from the eastern
city of Lahore.
Qadri gave the government, which in March will become the
first civilian administration in Pakistan history to complete a full term in
office, until 11:00 am (0600 GMT) to dissolve Parliament or face a “democratic
revolution”.
The deadline passed without incident, though sporadic
violence erupted several hours earlier. Police fired tear gas after protesters
brandishing sticks threw stones at police around 500 metres (yards) from
parliament, an AFP reporter said. Demonstrators smashed vehicle windows as they
continued their march and reached the edge of the heavily fortified “Red Zone”,
which houses parliament and the diplomatic enclave -- home to Western embassies
that closed on Tuesday. Gunshots were heard and at least one policeman was seen
shooting in the air. Both protesters and the authorities accused each other of
opening fire. Eight police were hurt in the clashes, Doctor Tanvir Afsar Malik,
a spokesman for the Federal Government Services Hospital, told AFP. Organisers
of the rally accused police of opening fire, of attempting to arrest the cleric
and of trying to provoke them into violence.
“They opened fire on Dr Tahir-ul-Qadri's car and tried to
smash the windows,” said Qadri spokesman Shahid Mursaleen.
AFP
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