Pakistan anti-government protestors press demands

Pakistan anti-government protestors press demands

ISLAMABAD - Thousands of opposition demonstrators crowded the streets of the Pakistani capital for a second day Sunday, after a populist cleric issued a 48-hour ultimatum demanding the arrest of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.

The ultimatum came as protestors led by Tahir-ul-Qadri and cricketer-turned politician Imran Khan from the eastern city of Lahore converged on Islamabad to press their demands.

Khan Saturday called on Sharif to step down, lashing out at the government he claims was elected fraudulently.

Khan was due to outline his party's demands to the government during an address to the protestors Sunday afternoon, Shireen Mazari, a spokeswoman for his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), told AFP.

"We will not go back until all our demands are accepted," Khan said earlier, demanding that all the officials involved in the alleged vote rigging be tried under the treason law.

Late Saturday he also warned Sharif to resign or else his supporters would enter the high security "Red Zone" of the capital on Sunday where top government buildings and embassies are located.

The May 2013 general election saw Sharif take power in a landslide, and international observers who monitored the polls said they were free and credible.

The demonstration is the culmination of a "long march" - in reality a motorised cavalcade - that set off Thursday from Lahore, around 300km away, to try to topple the government.

Call for arrest of Sharif

Qadri has already issued his demands calling for Sharif's arrest over what he alleged was the murder of his supporters and for the installation of an interim national government.

The cleric, who late Saturday issued a 48-hour ultimatum to the government to accept his demands, said he would not be responsible for any repercussions if they were not met.

He said Sharif and his younger brother Shahbaz Sharif, who is chief minister of the largest province, Punjab, had no right to sit in the government, their cabinets should be dissolved and they should be arrested on murder charges.

On June 17, at least 10 workers of Qadri's Pakistan Awami Tehreek (PAT) workers were killed in clashes with police at his headquarters in Lahore and a judicial commission was formed to probe the killings.

Analysts warned there was no possibility of a quick solution to the impasse.

"Apparently there are no signs that the government and the two parties are working towards a solution of the problem... both are sticking to their position leading to a deadlock," analyst Hasan Askari told AFP.

"If political leaders fail to resolve this problem and violence starts then the initiative will shift to the military - either to mediate the problem and see to it that the stalemate is resolved," he said, adding "This will further increase the military's clout in Pakistan".

Security in Islamabad has been ramped up in recent days, with some 30,000 police and security forces on the streets.

The government has agreed to allow the two groups to hold rallies but many of the streets are blocked off with shipping containers to protect sensitive areas.

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