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PoliticsPakistan

Pakistan: Imran Khan leads protest march on capital

May 25, 2022

Clashes have broken out between police and protesters and the ousted prime minister has called on his supporters to remain in Islamabad until fresh elections are held.

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Police officers assemble next to shipping containers placed by authorities
The government has used massive containers to block roads leading to IslamabadImage: Anjum Naveed/AP Photo/picture alliance

Authorities blocked all major roads leading to Pakistan's capital city, Islamabad, on Wednesday in an attempt to shut down a protest march led by former Prime Minister Imran Khan.

Clashes broke out between police and protesters.

"No obstacle can stop us: We will cross all the barriers and will reach ... Islamabad," Khan declared from atop a truck after making a dramatic arrival in a helicopter to join his supporters about 100 kilometres (60 miles) from the capital. 

Khan said Wednesday's rally would be massive and not end until the government agrees to hold fresh elections this year. Parliamentary elections are currently scheduled for 2023.

What was the government reaction to the planned Khan rally?

Authorities had blocked entry to Islamabad, Lahore, Multan and Peshawar, as crowds of Khan's supporters clashed with police. 

The main highway leading into Islamabad was blocked with shipping containers overnight, with authorities putting similar obstacles on other routes into the capital. Islamabad police published a traffic plan showcasing a complete blockade of the city amid a heavy security presence.

"Nobody should be allowed to besiege the capital and dictate his terms," Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah said Tuesday.

Organizers planned for protesters to travel by car and bus to the capital's city limits, after which they would march on foot.

By Wednesday Khan supporters were trying to tear down blockades outside Lahore and Faizabad, including with an excavator, while police fired tear gas at them. 

Paramilitary soldiers with riot gear arrive to take position at an entry point to the capital
Security forces have been deployed to prevent tensions from boiling overImage: Anjum Naveed/AP Photo/picture alliance

Why is there tension between Khan and the government?

A day earlier, a police officer was killed during a raid on the home of a Khan supporter in Lahore, prompting a crackdown from the government. 

Khan did not condemn the killing, but defended the shooter — a retired army officer and official of his party — by asking what a person should do if police forcibly entered their home.

Senior police officers and others attend funeral prayers for an officer who was killed by an opposition party supporter
Khan was banned from holding the rally after a police officer was killed by a supporterImage: K.M. Chaudary/AP Photo/picture alliance

Khan's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) has accused authorities of arresting and detaining hundreds of its supporters in raids overnight, while the government and police said some protesters planned to join the march with weapons.

The cricketer-turned-Islamist politician was at the helm of Pakistan’s government for over three and half years before he was ousted by a no-confidence vote in Parliament last month.

Following his dismissal, he and his followers have held several rallies across the country in the hope of bringing down a fragile coalition government and forcing early elections.

Khan has maintained that a US plot was behind his removal, accusing Washington of colluding with his successor, Shahbaz Sharif. The US has denied any role in Pakistan's internal politics.

Pakistan faces uncertain future

see, er/rt (AP, AFP)