PAKISTAN’S government has released 350 activists of the banned outfit Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP), interior minister Sheikh Rashid has announced, averting another showdown with the radical Islamist party.
TLP workers have been holding violent protests across the nation, especially in Lahore, against the government of prime minister Imran Khan for not releasing their party chief Saad Hussain Rizvi.
After reviewing TLP's demands, the issue will be resolved peacefully by Tuesday (26), Rashid said, Geo News reported on Sunday (24).
Opposition parties and the proscribed outfit had staged separate protests in multiple cities of the country, resulting in Islamabad, Lahore and Rawalpindi being partially shut down. Three policemen and seven TLP workers have died in the clashes so far that erupted on Wednesday (20).
“We have released 350 TLP workers up to now and we are still waiting to open both sides of the road of Muridke as per the decision with the TLP,” the interior minister tweeted after leading a government team in negotiations with representatives of the TLP, including Rizvi, its detained chief, in Islamabad.
Rasheed on Sunday (24) said that talks between the government and the TLP after they threatened to march towards Islamabad have been successful.
The TLP protesters will not move forward (to Islamabad) and will stay in Muridke till Tuesday (26), he added.
On Friday, Rizvi's party leader Ajmal Qadri said his supporters launched the “long march" after talks with the government failed to secure the release of their leader.
Rashid said that the government will withdraw cases registered against the activists of the TLP by Wednesday (27), the report added.
However, a TLP Shura member claimed the interior minister had sought time till the return of prime minister Khan who is currently on an official visit to Saudi Arabia, Dawn News reported.
Saad Hussain Rizvi, TLP founder late Khadim Rizvi's son, has been detained by the Punjab government since April last under the maintenance of 'public order' (MPO) following the party's protest against the blasphemous caricatures of Islam's Prophet published in France and its demand that the French ambassador be sent back and import of goods from that country be banned.
Subsequently, the TLP agreed to call off protests across the country on the Pakistan government's assurance that it would present a resolution on the expulsion of the French ambassador in the National Assembly.
However, the government had called a National Assembly session to debate the French envoy's expulsion and before a vote could take place on the resolution, the speaker announced the formation of a special committee to discuss the matter and asked the government and the opposition to engage with each other to develop consensus on the issue. No meeting of this special committee has been held since April.
(PTI)