A crowd of
protesters stormed Pakistan's state television channel, PTV, on Monday Sep 01,2014
and took the channel off air, with a news anchor claiming that some
working journalists were beaten up.
Pakistani soldiers and paramilitary forces entered the headquarters in Islamabad and restored order.
Protesters
led by opposition leaders Imran Khan, a hero cricket player turned
politician, and Tahir ul-Qadri, a firebrand cleric, have been on the
streets for weeks trying to bring down the government of Prime Minister
Nawaz Sharif.
Nawaz Sharif, who
easily won an election in May last year, has refused to step down. Qadri
and Khan allege widespread fraud in the country's May 2013 election, in
which Sharif's party won by a landslide.
The demonstrations descended into deadly chaos on Saturday, with at least three people killed in clashes with police.
Nawaz Sharif, who
was prime minister twice in the 1990s, swept to office last year in
Pakistan's first democratic transition of power. He is due to address
both houses of parliament on Tuesday in an apparent effort to show that
he is firmly in control.
But
Sharif looks increasingly cornered in the conflict, and even if he
survives the crisis he is likely to remain significantly weakened for
the rest of his tenure
Clashes
broke out early on Monday and the state PTV channel and its
English-language PTV World service were taken off the air after
protesters stormed its headquarters in Islamabad.
'They
have stormed the PTV office,' a news anchor said just before the screen
went blank. 'PTV staff performing their journalistic duties are being
beaten up.'
Pakistani soldiers stand guard outside the headquarters of PTV
Pakistani protesters beat the portrait of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif
with shoes at the main entry gate of the state television building in
Islamabad
Pakistani police run from opposition protesters during clashes near the prime minister's residence in Islamabad on Monday
Protests in Islamabad turned increasing towards violence today as police
clashed with demonstrators. As street battles erupted one officer who
was separated from the main force was attacked with sticks
Imran Khan addressed his supporters in Islamabad during an
anti-government march on the same day as hundreds of his backers seized
the state broadcaster's television offices and allegedly beat its
journalists
protest leader Imran Khan and fellow leader Tahir-ul-Qadri during the anti-government march on Tuesday Aug 03,2014
Pakistan's parliament stands by PM Sharif despite violent protests demanding his resignation
Pakistan's parliament threw its
weight behind embattled Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on Tuesday Aug 03,2014 as a
deepening crisis over violent protests demanding his resignation
prompted fears of an Army intervention.
But, signalling a possible softening in his position, protest leader
Imran Khan said he would meet a conservative Islamist politician who has
been trying to mediate between Khan and the government since the start
of the confrontation.
Sharif,
who enjoys a solid majority in parliament, convened a joint session of
the assembly as he seeks to reaffirm that he is fully in control more
than two weeks after protests seeking to bring down his government
erupted in the coup-prone nation.
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