Photo credit: Arise News
Pakistani security forces launched an operation Tuesday night aimed at dispersing supporters of imprisoned former prime minister Imran Khan, who had gathered in the capital to demand his release.
CBC News reports that thousands of supporters, defying government warnings, had broken through a barrier of shipping containers blocking off a high-security zone in central Islamabad. They clashed with security forces, facing tear gas shelling, mass detentions and gunfire.
Tension has been high in Islamabad since Sunday when supporters of the former prime minister began a “long march” from the restive northwest to demand his release. Khan has been in prison for over a year and faces more than 150 criminal cases that his party says are politically motivated.
Khan’s wife, Bushra Bibi, led the protest. But she fled as police pushed back against demonstrators. Hundreds of the supporters were arrested in the ongoing nighttime operation, and police are also seeking to arrest Bibi.
Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi told reporters that the Red Zone, which houses government buildings and embassies, and the surrounding areas have been cleared. Leaders from Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party, or PTI, have also fled the protest site.
Earlier Tuesday, Pakistan’s army took control of D-Chowk, a large square in downtown Islamabad’s Red Zone, which houses key government buildings and where visiting Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko is staying.
Since Monday, Naqvi had threatened that security forces would respond with live fire if protesters fired weapons at them. He said on Tuesday, “We have now authorized the police to respond as necessary.”
But before the operation began, protester Shahzor Ali said people had taken to the streets because Khan had called for them. He said, “We will stay here until Khan joins us. He will decide what we do next. If they fire bullets again, we will respond with bullets.”
Meanwhile, authorities have struggled to contain the protest-related violence. Six people, including four members of the security services, were killed when a vehicle rammed them on a street overnight into Tuesday. A police officer died in a separate incident.
Dozens of Khan supporters beat a videographer covering the protest for The Associated Press and took his camera. He sustained head injuries and was treated in a hospital.
By Tuesday afternoon, another group of protesters made their way unopposed to their destination in the Red Zone. Most demonstrators carried Khan’s party flag around their shoulders or wore its colours on accessories.
Naqvi remarked that Khan’s party had rejected a government offer to rally on the city’s outskirts.
Information Minister Atta Tarar warned there would be a severe government reaction to the violence. He said the government did not want Bibi to achieve her goal of freeing Khan. “She wants bodies falling to the ground. She wants bloodshed.”
According to the government, only the courts can free Khan, who was ousted in 2022, through a no-confidence vote in Parliament.
Police have arrested over 4,000 people in a bid to quell the unrest. Mobile and internet services have been suspended in some parts of the country, and messaging platforms were also experiencing severe disruption in the capital.
Khan’s party relies heavily on social media to demand his release and uses messaging platforms such as WhatsApp to share information, including details of events.
On Thursday, a court prohibited rallies in the capital, and Naqvi said anyone violating the ban would be arrested. Travel between Islamabad and other cities has become almost impossible because shipping containers block the roads. All schools remain closed