Pakistan army, government hit out at ex-PM Khan's party, promise action after violent protests

Police officers throw stones towards supporters of Pakistan's former Prime Minister Imran Khan during clashes, in Islamabad, Pakistan, on May 10, 2023. (AP)
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Updated 10 May 2023
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Pakistan army, government hit out at ex-PM Khan's party, promise action after violent protests

  • Six people killed, hundreds arrested as protests continue against Khan’s arrest in graft case
  • 84 injured people brought to Peshawar’s Lady Reading Hospital, 270 arrested in Sindh, 945 in Punjab

PESHAWAR/QUETTA/KARACHI: The Pakistan army on Wednesday said it would take action against “facilitators, planners and political activists” behind organized attacks on army properties and installations in the aftermath of the arrest of ex-Prime Minister Imran Khan, while Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif vowed punishment "as per the law and constitution" for violent protesters.

Khan's arrest on Tuesday afternoon sparked violent nationwide demonstrations by impassioned supporters of the ex-PM and his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), arguably the most popular political party in the country, known for holding massive protests and rallies in recent years.

On Tuesday, protesters smashed the main gate of the army’s headquarters in the garrison city of Rawalpindi, which neighbours Islamabad, as the army exercised restraint. Video footage widely circulated on social media showed hundreds of demonstrators shouting pro-Khan slogans as they moved toward the sprawling building.

In Lahore, the provincial capital of Pakistan's most politically important and populous Punjab province, about 4,000 of Khan’s supporters stormed the official residence of the top regional military commander on Tuesday evening, smashing windows and doors, damaging furniture and staging a sit-in as troops there retreated to avoid violence. The protesters also burned police vehicles, damaged government buildings and blocked key roads.

“Immediately after his arrest, there were organized attacks on army properties and installations and anti-army slogans were raised,” the army’s media wing, ISPR, said in a strongly-worded statement that all but named Khan’s PTI party.

“What the eternal enemies of the country could not do for seventy-five years, this group, wrapped in a political cloak, has succeeded in doing in its lust for power.”

Referring to ongoing protests and political turmoil in the country, ISPR said it was done through “nefarious planning,” calling it a “heinous attempt” to force a reaction from army that those behind the unrest could then use to fulfill their political ends.

“Army's mature response thwarted this conspiracy,” the statement said. “We are well aware that behind this are the orders, directives and directives of some evil leaders of the party … Facilitators, planners and political activists involved in these operations have been identified and strict action will be taken against them as per the law and all these evil elements will now themselves be responsible for the consequences.”

The army said any further attacks on the army, any other law enforcement agencies and military and state installations and properties would be responded to with full force, the “complete responsibility of which will fall on the shoulders of the very group that wants to push Pakistan into a civil war and has repeatedly expressed that it wants to do so.”

“No one can be allowed to incite people and take the law into their hands,” the statement concluded.

In an address to the nation, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif also castigated PTI and its leaders, saying it was their responsibility to guide supporters "not to cross the line."

"Unfortunately, Imran Khan and PTI not only did not take the legal route, in fact they propagated attacking and damaging sensitive, important public and private properties and showed they are enemies of the country," Sharif said.

"I warn these terrorists and enemies of the country to back off from these nefarious actions," the prime minister said, adding that those responsible for damage to lives and public property would be "punished as per the law and constitution."

A statement released by the Prime Minister's office after a meeting of the cabinet also slammed the PTI, saying it had gone from "targeting sensitive institutions and their officers" to "terrorist attacks on sensitive institutions and buildings."

Khan, who was ousted from the office of the prime minister in a parliamentary vote of no-confidence last April, has blamed the army, and its then army chief Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa, of plotting with the incumbent coalition government of PM Shehbaz Sharif to remove him. Khan came to power in a 2018 general election widely believed to have been rigged in his favour by the military - which both deny - but has since had a falling out with the army. He has said in interviews that his party's relations with Pakistan's all-powerful army have not improved under the new army chief, Gen Asim Munir. 

Khan has repeatedly said, including hours before his arrest on Tuesday, that intelligence official Major-General Faisal Naseer, a serving military officer, was behind an apparent assassination attack against his life last year. In recent rallies, Khan has repeated the name of Naseer, saying he was plotting to kill him and also said he was behind the murder of a pro-Khan TV anchor, Arshad Sharif, shot dead in Nairobi last year in what Kenyan police have called a case of "mistaken identity."

The army has called the allegations “baseless” and warned Khan of legal action.

The army’s latest warning to PTI came as five people were killed, dozens were injured and hundreds were arrested as nationwide protests against the arrest of Khan entered the second day, presenting a new blow to the nuclear-armed country as it struggles with its most daunting economic crisis to date.

Mobile data services were shut for a second day while Twitter, YouTube and Facebook were disrupted, as security forces tried to restore order after violence killed one person late on Tuesday in Quetta.

Authorities in three of Pakistan's four provinces have imposed an emergency order banning all gatherings after Khan's supporters clashed with police. The government has also sanctioned the deployment of the army in the federal capital as well as the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Punjab provinces to keep law and order, while a decision is pending on a request to the federal government by the Balochistan province to deploy troops.

KHYBER PAKHTUNKHWA

On Wednesday, a spokesperson for the Lady Reading Hospital (LRH) in Peshawar, the capital of the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, said four bodies had been received by the facility that day.

"84 injured people were brought to LRH,” media manager Asim Khan said. “Four have died since morning, the rest are being treated.”

Khan said another person had died late on Tuesday in a city in Malakand District of KP, bringing the total death toll in the province to five.

He said a majority of those being treated at LRH had gunshot wounds.

 




The ground floor of Radio Pakistan and Associated Press Pakistan premises in Peshawar on 10 May 2023. (AN photo)

DG Radio Pakistan said the Pakistan Radio building in Peshawar was set ablaze by at least 200 protesters who entered the premises and destroyed equipment and official records and torched four official vehicles parked in the station. 

Protesters also razed the Chaghi monument honoring Pakistan’s first nuclear test location.

BALOCHISTAN

In the southwestern province of Balochistan, one person was killed late on Tuesday night.

Waseem Baig, a spokesman at the Civil Hospital Quetta in the provincial capital, said the facility had received seven injured people and one body, identified as 27-year-old Umar Aziz, who was buried in Quetta on Wednesday.

Police said they were carrying out raids to round up PTI supporters resorting to violence.

"More than 40 PTI supporters have been arrested," a senior police officer in the city told Arab News, providing figures for total arrests from Tuesday and Wednesday’s protests.




Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party activists and supporters (foreground) of former Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan clash with police during a protest against the arrest of their leader, in Islamabad on May 10, 2023. (AFP)

A spokesman for PTI's Balochistan chapter, Asif Tareen, said a “crackdown” against the PTI's provincial leadership was ongoing since Tuesday night, and police had entered the residences of many supporters and activists.  

"The provincial leadership was shifted to safe areas to avoid arrest but their family members are being picked up by police,” Tareen said. “Police raided our provincial party office today and booked 12 of our party workers.”

SINDH

In the southern province of Sindh, 270 protesters have been arrested since Tuesday, police said. No deaths have been reported in the province.

“With the help of CCTV, arrests of those identified as damaging public and private property are going on,” Abdul Rasheed Chana, the spokesperson for the Sindh chief minister said.

“The Chief Minister of Sindh said that whoever has damaged the property, I want each and every accused behind the bars,” Chana quoted Murad Saeed as saying.




Police officers arresting a worker of former Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan's Pakistan Tehreeke-e-Insaf (PTI) party at Karachi's Millennium Mall on May 10, 2023. (AN photo)

The PTI Sindh released a statement on Wednesday night, accusing Sindh police of using violence against and arrested "peaceful protesters."

PUNJAB

In the province of Punjab, Pakistan’s most politically important and populous, the federal government on Wednesday sanctioned the deployment of army troops “for maintaining law & order situation across the Punjab province in aide of civil power,” a notification issued by the country's interior ministry said.

The decision was taken on the request of provincial authorities who said they would work out the “exact number of troops/assets, date and area of deployment” in consultation with the military.

On Wednesday, there were reports of mass arrests on Liberty Chowk, where Khan supporters had been asked by the PTI to gather for protests.

In a statement released on Wednesday morning, Punjab police said over 130 policemen had been injured in protests since Tuesday by “miscreants involved in violent acts, vandalism, damage to public and private property throughout the province.”

A police spokesperson said over 25 police and government vehicles had been damaged and burnt while 14 government buildings had been attacked, looted and damaged.

“Police teams have arrested 945 law breakers and miscreants from across the province,” the statement said.

ISLAMABAD

In Islamabad, the federal capital, around 500 Khan supporters clashed with police and pelted them with stoned on the Srinagar Highway, a main road in the city. Police retaliated with intense teargas shelling. Subsequently, fresh police contingents were called in to push back protestors who had blocked the road for all kinds of traffic.




A policeman fires a teargas shell towards Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party activists and supporters (unseen) of former Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan during a protest outside the police headquarters where Khan is in custody, in Islamabad on May 10, 2023. (AFP)

Islamabad police spokesperson Taqi Jawad told Arab News over 100 PTI supporters had been arrested "for damaging public property" while 12 police officials were injured. No deaths have so far been reported in clashes in Islamabad.

"This can't be tolerated, the law will take its course," Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal told a news conference. "These violent attacks were not the outcome of any public outpouring, they were planned by the PTI rank and file."

– With additional inputs from Aamir Saeed in Islamabad and Haseeb Asif in Lahore


Pakistan’s Dr. Shahzad Baig makes it to TIME’s 100 world leaders in health

Updated 5 sec ago
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Pakistan’s Dr. Shahzad Baig makes it to TIME’s 100 world leaders in health

  • Before arriving in Pakistan, Baig was a technical adviser to Nigeria’s polio eradication effort, which remained successful
  • Pakistan, Afghanistan are only two countries in world where polio continues to threaten health and well-being of children

ISLAMABAD: US news magazine TIME has included Dr. Shahzad Baig, the Pakistan Polio Eradication Programme’s national coordinator, to its list of 100 most influential people across the world in the field of health in 2024.
The list, titled ‘TIME100 HEALTH,’ this week honored individuals from across the world for their services for fresh discoveries, novel treatments, and global victories over disease.
Baig was recognized for his efforts for the eradication of poliovirus, which mainly affects children under the age of ten years by invading their nervous system, and can cause paralysis or even death.
Pakistan and Afghanistan are the only two countries in the world where polio continues to threaten the health and well-being of children. 
“On the front lines in the effort to stamp it [polio] out is Dr. Shahzad Baig, national coordinator of Pakistan’s polio-eradication program,” TIME wrote on its website.
“In 2019, polio disabled or killed 147 people in Pakistan; since Baig assumed the position, in 2021, case counts have plummeted, with only six children stricken in 2023.”
Before arriving in Pakistan, Baig was a technical adviser to Nigeria’s polio eradication effort, which succeeded spectacularly, according to the US magazine.
In 2020, the African country became the most recent one in the world to be declared polio-free.
“If Baig has his way, Pakistan will be the next,” it added.


Canada has ‘political compulsion’ to blame India for Sikh slaying — New Delhi

Updated 05 May 2024
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Canada has ‘political compulsion’ to blame India for Sikh slaying — New Delhi

  • Canadian police on Friday arrested three for the murder of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, saying they were investigating their links to Indian government
  • The killing soured Ottawa-New Delhi diplomatic ties after PM Trudeau said there were ‘credible allegations’ linking Indian intelligence to crime

NEW DELHI: Canada’s investigation into alleged Indian involvement in the assassination of a Sikh separatist in Vancouver last year is a “political compulsion,” New Delhi’s foreign minister said after three Indian citizens were arrested over the killing.
Canadian police on Friday arrested the trio for the murder of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, saying they were investigating their links to the Indian government, “if any.”
The killing sent diplomatic relations between Ottawa and New Delhi into a tailspin last autumn after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said there were “credible allegations” linking Indian intelligence to the crime.
India vehemently rejected the allegations as “absurd,” halting the processing of visas for a time and forcing Canada to significantly reduce its diplomatic presence in the country.
“It is their political compulsion in Canada to blame India,” the Press Trust of India news agency quoted external affairs minister S. Jaishankar as saying on Saturday.
Thousands of people were killed in the 1980s during a separatist insurgency aimed at creating a Sikh homeland known as Khalistan, which was put down by security forces.
The movement has largely petered out within India, but in the Sikh diaspora — whose largest community is in Canada, with around 770,000 people — it retains support among a vocal minority.
New Delhi has sought to persuade Ottawa not to grant Sikh separatists visas or political legitimacy, Jaishankar said, since they are “causing problems for them (Canada), for us and also for our relationship.”
He added that Canada does not “share any evidence with us in certain cases, police agencies also do not cooperate with us.”
Nijjar immigrated to Canada in 1997 and acquired citizenship 18 years later. He was wanted by Indian authorities for alleged terrorism and conspiracy to commit murder.
The three arrested Indian nationals, all in their twenties, were charged with first degree murder and conspiracy.
They were accused of being the shooter, driver and lookout in his killing last June.
The Canadian police said they were aware that “others may have played a role” in the murder.
In November, the US Justice Department charged an Indian citizen living in the Czech Republic with plotting a similar assassination attempt on another Sikh separatist leader on American soil.
A Washington Post investigation reported last week that Indian foreign intelligence officials were involved in the plot, a claim rejected by New Delhi.


PCB chief announces $100,000 reward for each player if Pakistan wins T20 World Cup

Updated 05 May 2024
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PCB chief announces $100,000 reward for each player if Pakistan wins T20 World Cup

  • Mohsin Naqvi made the announcement during his visit to Qaddafi Stadium, where the Babar Azam-led side has been practicing
  • The Pakistan side is scheduled to travel to Ireland, England for T20 tours later this month, followed by the World Cup in June

ISLAMABAD: Mohsin Naqvi, chief of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB), has announced $100,000 reward for each player in case the national side wins the upcoming Twenty20 World Cup, the PCB said on Sunday.
Naqvi made the announcement during his visit to the Qaddafi Stadium in Lahore, where the Babar Azam-led side began the national camp on Saturday, according to the PCB.
He stayed there for two hours and held a detailed discussion with Pakistan players on the strategy of upcoming games.
“This reward is nothing compared to Pakistan’s victory,” Naqvi was quoted as saying.
“I hope you will raise the green flag. Play without any pressure and compete hard. God willing, victory will be yours.”
The Pakistan side is scheduled to travel to Ireland and England for T20 tours later this month.
The tours will help the side prepare for the T20 World Cup scheduled to be held in the United States and the West Indies in June.


IMF says its mission will visit Pakistan this month to discuss new loan

Updated 05 May 2024
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IMF says its mission will visit Pakistan this month to discuss new loan

  • Pakistan last month completed a short-term $3 billion program, which helped stave off sovereign default
  • But the government of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has stressed the need for a fresh, longer-term program

KARACHI: An International Monetary Fund mission is expected to visit Pakistan this month to discuss a new program, the lender said on Sunday ahead of Islamabad beginning its annual budget-making process for the next financial year.
Pakistan last month completed a short-term $3 billion program, which helped stave off sovereign default, but the government of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has stressed the need for a fresh, longer-term program.
“A mission is expected to visit Pakistan in May to discuss the FY25 budget, policies, and reforms under a potential new program for the welfare of all Pakistanis,” the IMF said in an emailed response to Reuters.
Pakistan’s financial year runs from July to June and its budget for fiscal year 2025, the first by Sharif’s new government, has to be presented before June 30.
The IMF did not specify the dates of the visit, nor the size or duration of the program.
“Accelerating reforms now is more important than the size of the program, which will be guided by the package of reform and balance of payments needs,” the IMF statement said.
Pakistan narrowly averted default last summer, and its $350 billion economy has stabilized after the completion of the last IMF program, with inflation coming down to around 17 percent in April from a record high 38 percent last May.
It is still dealing with a high fiscal shortfall and while it has controlled its external account deficit through import control mechanisms, it has come at the expense of stagnating growth, which is expected to be around 2 percent this year compared to negative growth last year.
Earlier, in an interview with Reuters, Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb said the country hoped to agree the contours of a new IMF loan in May.
Pakistan is expected to seek at least $6 billion and request additional financing from the Fund under the Resilience and Sustainability Trust.


Pakistan PM extends condolences over death of Saudi poet Prince Badr bin Abdul Mohsen

Updated 05 May 2024
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Pakistan PM extends condolences over death of Saudi poet Prince Badr bin Abdul Mohsen

  • Prince Badr, affectionately known as the ‘word engineer,’ was a legendary figure in the contemporary Saudi poetry
  • His influence on art form was felt across the Gulf, while his eloquent verses left indelible mark on hearts and minds

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Sunday extended his heartfelt condolences to Saudi Arabia’s Royal Family on the death of eminent Saudi poet, Prince Badr bin Abdul Mohsen, saying his legacy would continue to inspire generations to come.
The prince, affectionately known as the “word engineer,” was a legendary figure in contemporary Saudi poetry whose influence in the art form was felt across the country and the wider Gulf region, where his eloquent verses and poignant prose left an indelible mark on the people’s hearts and minds.
A pioneer in the popularization of Saudi poetry among Arab audiences, Prince Badr’s verses were immortalized in songs by many esteemed Arab artists, including Talal Maddah, Mohammed Abdu, Kadim Al-Sahir and Assala. His patriotic words and songs struck a deep chord with Saudis in particular.
In a post on X, Sharif said Prince Badr’s most popular song on Saudi Arabia’s National Day would always remind the world of his profound love for his country.
“His contributions to contemporary poetry in the Arabian Peninsula were truly remarkable and his legacy will continue to inspire generations to come,” the Pakistan premier said.
“May his soul rest in peace and may his words forever resonate in the hearts of poetry lovers around the world.”


Prince Badr was born on April 2, 1949, and his journey as a poet and cultural figure began at a young age. He studied in Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the UK and the US as he took his early steps on the path to becoming a significant figure in Arab literature.
As president of the Saudi Society for Culture and Arts, he played a crucial role in fostering artistic expression and influencing the development of poetry organizations in the Kingdom. In recognition of his outstanding contributions in the field, King Salman honored Prince Badr with the prestigious King Abdulaziz Medal in 2019.
Soon after, the Kingdom’s Literature, Publishing and Translation Commission announced plans to collect and publish his complete literary works to commemorate his enduring legacy and celebrate the profound impact he had on the Saudi creative movement during a five-decade career.