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Pakistan capital braces for anti-govt protests on Independence Day

Imran Khan and Tahir ul-Qadri will lead protest from Lahore to the Islamabad
Islamabad: As Pakistan celebrated its Independence Day on Thursday, fear of violence loomed large with the capital turned into a fortress ahead of two massive anti-government rallies, demanding resignation of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and fresh elections.
The two groups, led by cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan and Canada-based cleric Tahir ul-Qadri, plan to converge on Islamabad to press Sharif to call an early election little over a year after his landslide victory in the polls.
Both Khan and Qadri have announced to lead their protestors from eastern city of Lahore to the capital and stage a sit-in till the government resigns.
Khan wants the government's ouster over alleged rigging in last year's poll, which his party Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf lost, while Qadri wants to bring a revolution in the country.
Sharif's government, bracing for the protests, has turned the capital into a fortress, sealing it off with shipping containers, barbed wires and digging trenches.
Almost every entry point to Islamabad has been blocked with nearly 25,000 police and paramilitary forces deployed to prevent anti-government protesters from entering the capital.
The heavily guarded "red zone", which is home to parliament, the president and prime minister's residences and foreign embassies, was blocked with containers and barbed wire.
The streets of Islamabad were largely deserted with almost all offices and shops closed yesterday.
Many parts of Lahore have also been blocked off with containers to block the protesters amid fears that there could be clashes. The government has also ordered the suspension of mobile phone services and wireless internet services in several parts of Islamabad for an indefinite period.
In addition, about 5,000 Islamabad capital territory police and thousands of paramilitary soldiers have been deployed in the capital.
Already the army has been called in Islamabad under a controversial order by invoking article 245 of the Constitution, which authorises civilian government to summon armed forces in aid of the administration.
Sharif, in a last ditch effort to wean away the protestors, announced on Tuesday night to appoint a three-member commission of the Supreme Court to investigate fraud in the
elections but Khan refused to back off.
Analysts believe that the government will survive the confrontation as military is not prepared to topple it as there are fewer options of replacement.
( Source : PTI )
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