Pakistan minister resigns after violent Islamist protests: state media
Pakistan minister resigns after violent
Islamist protests: state media
Pakistan's law minister Zahid Hamid has resigned, state media reported Monday, meeting a key demand of Islamist protesters who have clashed violently with security forces and blockaded the capital Islamabad for weeks.
Pakistan's law minister Zahid Hamid has resigned, state media reported Monday, meeting a key demand of Islamist protesters who have clashed violently with security forces and blockaded the capital Islamabad for weeks.
Hamid "has submitted his
resignation to Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi to steer the country out of
crisis," the state-run news agency Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) said
in a report citing unnamed official sources, without giving further details.
State television station PTV also
reported the minister's resignation, without citing any sources. There was no
immediate confirmation or comment from government officials.
Hamid's resignation was a key demand
of the little known Islamist group that has virtually paralysed Islamabad since
it began a sit-in on a major highway into the capital on November 6.
The Tehreek-i-Labaik Ya Rasool Allah
Pakistan (TLY) have been calling for Hamid's ousting for weeks over a
hastily-abandoned amendment to the oath that election candidates must swear.
The protesters have linked it to
blasphemy -- a highly contentious issue in Muslim Pakistan that has often
fuelled violence. On Saturday security forces attempted to clear the roughly
2,000 demonstrators at the sit-in in a botched operation that devolved into
violence, with at least seven people killed and hundreds wounded before they
were ordered to retreat.
The clashes fuelled more protests in
other cities, including Pakistan's two largest Karachi and Lahore, and saw
thousands more demonstrators arrive on the streets of Islamabad.
The government called on the army to
intervene to restore order late Saturday. By Monday morning there still had
been no official response from the military.
The reports of Hamid's resignation
raised hopes that the protest leaders would end the sit-in, which has enraged
commuters with hours-long traffic snarls, caused the death of at least one
child whose ambulance could not reach hospital in time, and infuriated the
judiciary.
Numbers were dwindling at the
Islamabad protest site early Monday, with AFP reporters saying around 2,500
demonstrators remained. Leader Khadim Hussain Rizvi had not yet arrived as
Hamid's resignation was reported.
The minister's ousting is the latest
in a series of heavy blows to the beleaguered Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz)
government as general elections approach in 2018.
In July, former prime minister Nawaz
Sharif was deposed by the courts over graft allegations, while finance minister
Ishaq Dar -- also accused of corruption -- has taken indefinite medical leave.
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