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Islamists call halt to Pakistan protest after govt allows vote on French envoy

AFP

South Asia

Pakistan's parliament has postponed until Friday a debate on whether the country should expel the French ambassador, as the government bids to appease a radical party that has threatened more violent protests unless the envoy is kicked out.

The Tehreek-i-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) has waged an anti-France campaign for months since President Emmanuel Macron defended the right of a satirical magazine to republish cartoons depicting the Prophet Mohammed -- an act deemed blasphemous by many Muslims.

Interior Minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed on Tuesday said the government had held negotiations with TLP leaders, who agreed to call off the protests after learning a resolution would be discussed in parliament on the future of the French envoy.

Leaders from the TLP, however, told AFP their protests would continue, with a few thousand supporters staging a sit-in outside a mosque in Lahore.

At a special session of the National Assembly on Tuesday, the speaker pushed back a resolution by a ruling party member on the issue, saying it should be tabled collectively by the government and opposition, before adjourning until Friday.

"We have fulfilled our agreement... we said that we will bring a resolution in the house and a resolution was presented," Federal Minister of Information Fawad Chaudhry said later.

"Now if the opposition accepts it or not, or if they want to amend it and want changes, then it is a parliamentary process under which the matter will go ahead."

Resolutions relating to sensitive Islamic issues are often passed unanimously in Pakistan's parliament, but are non-binding, with many previous votes not enacted by the government.

The TLP has said it will press ahead with a convoy from Lahore to Islamabad planned for midnight on Tuesday if the French ambassador has not been kicked out.

Security forces have blocked major entry points to Islamabad with shipping containers.

French urged to leave

Several police officers were killed in clashes with demonstrators this week, while 11 others were held hostage for several hours at a TLP mosque on Sunday, Lahore police said. The TLP says several of its supporters also died in skirmishes.

Prime Minister Imran Khan on Monday pleaded with the radical group to end its violent campaign to oust the ambassador, saying the unrest was harming the nation.

"It doesn't make any difference to France," he said in a national address broadcast on television.

The French embassy last week recommended all its citizens leave the country, and on Monday a source at the foreign ministry said Paris was recalling all non-essential staff and their families.

The Pakistan government banned the TLP last Wednesday -- effectively labelling the group a terror organization -- and police arrested thousands of protesters during clashes, but Rashid said no action would be taken against them.

Few issues are as galvanizing in Pakistan as blasphemy, and even the slightest suggestion of an insult to Islam can supercharge protests, incite lynching’s, and unite the country's warring political parties.