Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian cleric defends campaign to oust Pakistani government

Abdul Latheef The Canadian Press, 12 Aug, 2014 11:38 AM
    A Pakistani-Canadian cleric who is leading the campaign to topple the government in his native country said Tuesday he will continue his fight despite a murder investigation launched against him by Pakistani police.
     
    Muhammad Tahir-ul-Qadri, who left Toronto in June to return to his hometown of Lahore, has called on thousands of his supporters to march on the capital Islamabad on Thursday in a bid to oust the government of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.
     
    Police in Lahore launched a murder investigation against Qadri on Sunday after authorities said an officer died during clashes with his supporters. Police allege the cleric incited people to violence, but Qadri denied the allegations.
     
    "All cases are just fabricated, just fabricated, based on false accusations," he told The Canadian Press in a telephone interview from Lahore.
     
    The protests planned for Thursday — the country's independence day — represent the strongest challenge yet to the Sharif's government, just a year after he took office in the first democratic transfer of power in a country long plagued by military coups.
     
    Qadri has a loyal following of thousands through his network of mosques and religious schools in Pakistan. He is the founder of Minhaj-ul-Quran International, a liberal Islamic group that promotes peace and interfaith dialogue.
     
    The 63-year-old cleric first held a protest in Islamabad last year, calling for election reforms ahead of the country's May poll.
     
    There has been wide speculation that Qadri has internal support from Pakistan's powerful military, whose relation with Sharif's government has been strained over its refusal to allow ousted dictator Pervez Musharraf leave the country, but Qadri says that's not true.
     
    "I have never met a single general and I have never spoken to any general on telephone even. I have no contact. This is totally a lie. I reject it," he said, adding that it's in the "culture of Pakistani politics" to make false allegations against those who raise their voice against the government.
     
    Qadri said he is fighting for justice and democracy, accusing the government of widespread corruption, use of police for political purposes and violation of basic freedoms.
     
    "We're raising a democratic voice just to get the basic rights of human beings," he said.
     
    Qadri said he is outraged over the killing of 14 party workers during a standoff with police in June. He said two months have passed and a police investigation has yet to be launched.
     
    "Is this democracy? Is this the system of protection of human life? Is this the system of justice?"
     
    Prof. Madiha Afzal, an expert on Pakistan affairs at Brookings Institution in Washington, said Qadri's influence in the anti-government movement is limited as he's not an elected politician.
     
    "But the forceful and ultimately fatal way in which the government dealt with his supporters in June in Lahore, and the violent interaction again this past week has lent him greater legitimacy," she said in an email.
     
    The Pakistani government has dismissed Thursday's march as simply chaos created by "Musharraf's friends," but authorities are taking no chances.
     
    Shipping containers blocked many roads leading into central Islamabad on Tuesday and police in riot gear could be seen taking up positions across the city as authorities suspended mobile phone service in some areas.
     
    The government has also invoked a rarely-used article in the constitution allowing the military to step in to maintain law and order if needed.
     
    Qadri said the Lahore suburb of Model Town, where he lives, has been under a virtual siege for the past 10 days as part of a government security clampdown.
     
    "Absolute blockade for the last 10 days. We're in a jail, like in Gaza."
     
    A Foreign Affairs spokesman in Ottawa said the department was aware of media reports about the investigation against Qadri and it was monitoring the situation, but refused to comment further, citing privacy reasons.
     
    Qadri said he has had no contact with the Canadian government.
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Three Dead After Plane Crash in Northwestern Ontario

    Three Dead After Plane Crash in Northwestern Ontario
    KENORA, Ont. - Ontario Provincial police say three people have died in a plane crash in northwestern Ontario.

    Three Dead After Plane Crash in Northwestern Ontario

    Flow from breach B.C. Tailings pond in Cariboo region has been reduce: Province

    Flow from breach B.C. Tailings pond in Cariboo region has been reduce: Province
    LIKELY, B.C. - British Columbia says there has been a dramatic drop in the amount of material leaking from a breached tailings pond that contaminated waterways in the province's Cariboo region.

    Flow from breach B.C. Tailings pond in Cariboo region has been reduce: Province

    Test results from patient with Ebola-like symptoms expected Sunday

    Test results from patient with Ebola-like symptoms expected Sunday
    BRAMPTON, Ont. - Public health officials in Ontario say they expect to have test results before Monday concerning a patient with flu-like symptoms that are similar to those of the Ebola virus.

    Test results from patient with Ebola-like symptoms expected Sunday

    Manitoba: On the run for weeks, Cat with bug catcher on its head is safely trapped

    Manitoba: On the run for weeks, Cat with bug catcher on its head is safely trapped
    According to the Brandon and Area Lost Animals group, Butterscotch is in good shape considering his ordeal and was being treated at the Grand Valley Animal Clinic.

    Manitoba: On the run for weeks, Cat with bug catcher on its head is safely trapped

    WHO seeks expert advice on the ethics of using experimental Ebola drugs

    WHO seeks expert advice on the ethics of using experimental Ebola drugs
    TORONTO - On Monday experts from around the world will converge, by telephone, to try to chart a path through a mine field of ethical issues related to the expanding Ebola outbreak in West Africa.

    WHO seeks expert advice on the ethics of using experimental Ebola drugs

    Unicyclists Show off their Skills at World Championships in Montreal

    Unicyclists Show off their Skills at World Championships in Montreal
    MONTREAL - Some of the world's most skilled athletes on one wheel are finishing up more than a week of showing off their moves in Montreal.

    Unicyclists Show off their Skills at World Championships in Montreal