Government bans protests, alerts troops in Punjab, Sindh
LAHORE: Effective from Wednesday, Section 144 was imposed in the Punjab and Sindh provinces for three and 15 days respectively, news reports said.
‘This decision was taken because the government does not want large gatherings in Lahore in connection with the long march. As authority, I have approved the 144 section in Lahore.’ Nazim Lahore, Mian Amir Mehmood told Dawn reporters.
‘Our main concern is public safety. That is why this step was taken, we are ensuring to keep the law and order situation under control. The Lahore police has sufficient manpower for implementing this and are very capable of handling such a situation,’ he said.
‘There is the apprehension that there may be possible threats to the people of Lahore, especially after the Sri Lankan incident, the people responsible for it are still at large. We are just ensuring that the incident doesn’t happen again.’ Mehmood told our reporter.
Lawyers and opposition parties are organising a march from March 12-16 to demand the reinstatement of supreme court chief justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry and other judges sacked by former military ruler Pervez Musharraf.
Under the Section 144, no protest march or gathering of people at one place would be allowed, DCO police said.
‘Rallies and protests have been banned throughout the Punjab province,’ a senior home department official told AFP.‘Rangers (paramilitary troops) have been requisitioned to help with the security,’ the official said on condition of anonymity, adding that ‘if needed the army would also be called in to maintain calm.’The ban on rallies started late Tuesday in Lahore, Pakistan’s second-largest city.
‘A ban has been imposed on protests, rallies and display of weapons,’ commissioner of Lahore Khusro Pervez told AFP.
Opposition parties claimed that dozens of their workers have been arrested in a crackdown late Tuesday, but police and government officials neither confirmed nor denied that any arrests had been made.
‘Anyone violating the law and causing damage to the public property will be held accountable under the law,’ Pervez said.
Opposition leader Shahbaz Sharif vowed to defy the law and asked his supporters to go ahead with the protest despite the ban.
‘The government can do whatever it can, but we will all reach Islamabad , come what may,’ Sharif told reporters here.
He reiterated appeals to the police and administration officials to disobey the government order to break up demonstrations.
‘I urge the administration and police not to obey the illegal orders of the government to block the protests,’ he said.
The Pakistani government Monday threatened Shahbaz’s brother, the main opposition leader and ex-premier Nawaz Sharif, with charges of sedition for inciting people to rebellion after a court barred him from public office.
Sharif has made speeches calling on the police not to obey government orders and attacked judges who disqualified him saying he does not recognise the rulings of the Supreme Court — the highest in the country.
The politician has joined forces with lawyers who are organising the march, which will go from the southern port city of Karachi to Islamabad via Lahore , the Sharif brothers’ stronghold.
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