Islamabad operation: Protesters clash with police for second day
ISLAMABAD: Tehreek-i-Labaik Yah Rasool Allah Pakistan (TLYRAP) activists on Sunday clashed with security forces for a second day on the outskirts of Pakistan's capital, Islamabad, burning vehicles before withdrawing to a protest camp they have occupied for more than two weeks, police said.
According media reports at least six people were killed on the previous day, when several thousand police and paramilitary tried to disperse a sit-in protest by the TLYRAP, who have blocked the main route into the capital from the neighbouring garrison city of Rawalpindi.
More than 125 people were wounded in Saturday's failed crackdown, and police superintendent Amir Niazi said 80 members of the security forces were among the casualties.
On Sunday morning, smoke billowed from the charred remains of a car and three motorcycles near the protest camp, where several thousand members of the TLYRAP have gathered in defiance.
Police and paramilitary forces had surrounded the camp in the Faizabad district between the two cities, but no army troops were on the scene, despite a call the night before by the civilian government for the military to help restore order.
"We will move when we have orders," Niazi, the police superintendent, said on Saturday. "What the protesters did yesterday was in no means was lawful. They attacked our forces."
Activists from TLYRAP have blocked the main road into the capital for two weeks, accusing the law minister of blasphemy against Islam and demanding his dismissal and arrest.
"We are in our thousands. We will not leave. We will fight until end," TLYRAP spokesman Ejaz Ashrafi told Reuters on Saturday.
Tehreek-i-Labaik Yah Rasool Allah Pakistan is one of two new ultra-religious political movements that became prominent in recent months.
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