PESHAWAR: Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf demonstrators dispersed Sunday evening to take a break for the night with an announcement from the party that the protest will be continued today against the...
By
AFP
|
November 25, 2013
PESHAWAR: Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) demonstrators dispersed Sunday evening to take a break for the night with an announcement from the party that the protest will be continued today against the unilateral missile attacks by the CIA operated US drones inside Pakistan.
On Sunday, the protesters roughed up drivers as they sought to stop trucks carrying NATO troop supplies and equipment from passing through Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP).
The rally came a day after a party led by politician and cricket star Imran Khan said it would prevent NATO supply trucks making their way to and from Afghanistan from travelling through Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province until the US stops drone strikes.
The US leads the NATO coalition of troops battling the Taliban in neighboring Afghanistan.
Close to 100 protesters on the outskirts of Peshawar, the capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, checked the documents of truck drivers headed toward Afghanistan as they passed through a toll booth. They shouted at the drivers, and pulled one man, Gul Zaman, out of his truck when he told them that he was carrying commercial goods to Afghanistan, not NATO supplies.
"Without waiting for me to take my documents out of the glove compartment, they dragged me out," Zaman said. "We are also concerned about drone attacks, but they shouldn't come down heavy on us like this."
Police were present at the scene but did not intervene to stop the protesters, some of whom were carrying wooden batons.
Khan, whose Tehreek-e-Insaf party controls the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial government, has been a vocal critic of drone attacks. He and other officials say the strikes are a violation of the country's sovereignty, although the federal government is known to have secretly supported some of the attacks in the past.
Khan led thousands of supporters in a protest near Peshawar on Saturday in which they blocked a road that led to one of two border crossings used by trucks carrying NATO supplies in and out of Afghanistan.
The other crossing is in Baluchistan province.
The demonstration had more symbolic value than practical impact because there is normally very little NATO supply traffic on the weekend.
Federal Information Minister Pervez Rashid accused Khan on Sunday of trying to damage Pakistan's relationship with NATO countries and neighboring Afghanistan."
Anyone who wants to disturb our relations with neighbors is not serving the country," Rashid said. "Because of Imran Khan we could be isolated in the world."
Rashid said on Saturday that the federal government's anti-drone stance was clear and accused Khan of "playing politics" with the issue.
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has also been a vocal critic of drone strikes since he took office in June. He pushed President Barack Obama to end the attacks during a visit to Washington in October, but the US has shown no indication it will stop using a tool it views as vital for battling al-Qaida and the Taliban.
Khan has pushed the federal government to block NATO supplies across the country to force the US to end drone strikes, but it has shown little interest in doing so.
While Sharif has said he wants the attacks to end, he has also made clear that he values a friendly relationship with the US.
Its unclear if the government will take action to prevent Khan's supporters from stopping NATO supply trucks.
The land routes through Pakistan have been key to getting supplies to NATO troops in Afghanistan. They now increasingly are being used to ship equipment out of Afghanistan as the US seeks to withdraw most of its combat troops from the country by the end of 2014. (Geo/AP)