TLP rally against Dutch cartoon contest reaches Islamabad

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Hundreds of protesters led by the Tehreek-e-Labaik Pakistan (TLP) party are marching toward Islamabad to register their protest against an anti-Islam cartoon contest announced by a Dutch parliamentarian Geert Wilders. (Photo courtesy: social media)
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Hundreds of protesters led by the Tehreek-e-Labaik Pakistan (TLP) party are marching toward Islamabad to register their protest against an anti-Islam cartoon contest announced by a Dutch parliamentarian Geert Wilders. (Photo courtesy: social media)
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Hundreds of protesters led by the Tehreek-e-Labaik Pakistan (TLP) party are marching toward Islamabad to register their protest against an anti-Islam cartoon contest announced by a Dutch parliamentarian Geert Wilders. (Photo courtesy: social media)
Updated 30 August 2018
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TLP rally against Dutch cartoon contest reaches Islamabad

  • PM constitutes four-member committee to negotiate with TLP leadership
  • Political analysts say the government cannot expel the Dutch ambassador to Pakistan as his country’s prime minister has already distanced his administration from the planned cartoon contest

ISLAMABAD: A rally organized by Tehreek-e-Labaik Pakistan (TLP) against an anti-Islam cartoon contest is expected to reach the country’s federal capital by Thursday night, as all attempts by the newly-elected Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) government failed to avert the march, officials told Arab News.

The competition organized by Geert Wilders, a Dutch parliamentarian and leader of the far-right Freedom Party, is slated for November this year. 

“We will reach Islamabad tonight and hold a sit-in until the government accepts our demands and expels the Dutch ambassador,” Pir Ejaz Ahmad Ashrafi, central TLP leader, said. 

He confirmed that the government’s representatives had held several negotiations with TLP’s leadership but “no concrete development has taken place so far.”

Ashrafi said that thousands of participants would peacefully register their protest and ask the government to meet their “genuine demand” as quickly as possible to avoid any disruption of public life. 

The rally, led by TLP’s wheelchair-bound chief, Khadim Husain Rizvi, began from Lahore on Wednesday afternoon. The participants spent the night in Gujrat, a district of Punjab province, and set off for Islamabad in the morning. 

Their movement was, however, blocked briefly at Jhelum by the local administration. “Jhelum’s district administration tried to convince us to call off our protest rally, but we refused,” Ashrafi said.

Earlier, Federal Minister for Religious Affairs, Noorul Haq Qadri, held a meeting with the TLP chief to convince him to cancel his march, arguing that the government had already taken enough steps to raise the issue at all international forums. 

Taking cognizance of the matter, Prime Minister Imran Khan formed a four-member committee on Thursday to resolve the issue. In addition to Qadri, other members in the committee include Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi, Punjab Law Minister Raja Basharat and Information Minister Fawad Chaudhry.

“We desire a peaceful resolution of the issue through negotiations with the TLP leadership,” Chaudhry said in a statement. 

Pakistan’s parliament has unanimously condemned Wilders’ plans to hold the anti-Islam cartoon contest which encourages participants to draw caricatures of Prophet Muhammad (PBUH).

Following a protest by Pakistan’s Foreign Office and other Muslim countries, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte termed Wilders’ move as “not respectful,” distancing his government from the plan. However, he refused to ban the competition on the grounds that he would not curtail “freedom of speech.” 

With the rally approaching the federal capital, Islamabad’s district administration began bringing in shipping containers to secure the Red Zone – a place that houses the most important state installations, such as the Parliament House, Supreme Court, and diplomatic enclave – and other sensitive locations.

“We have devised an elaborate security plan to deal with the protesters,” Muhammad Naeem, spokesperson for Islamabad Police, told Arab News. “We have requested additional contingents of Rangers and Frontier Constabulary to deal with any untoward incident.” 

Political analysts say the government should start negotiating with the TLP leadership as early as possible to avert the sit-in in Islamabad. 

“One thing is for sure: The government is not in a position to expel the Dutch ambassador to Pakistan as the Dutch government has already distanced itself from the planned cartoon contest,” Professor Tahir Malik, an academic and political analyst, said. 

“The government is in a catch-22 situation, but it needs to devise a way to deal with the protestors sensibly,” he added. “Effective negotiations with the protestors should be the only strategy the government must employ.”


Leaders of Indonesia and Australia sign a new security treaty to affirm deeper ties

Updated 3 sec ago
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Leaders of Indonesia and Australia sign a new security treaty to affirm deeper ties

JAKARTA: Indonesian and Australian leaders signed a new bilateral security treaty Friday that both governments say will deepen ties between the often-testy neighbors.
The treaty was signed in Indonesia’s capital, Jakarta, three months after Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto announced in Sydney that negotiations on the pact had been substantively concluded, highlighting their ambition to better utilize the two country’s past security agreements inked in 1995 and 2006.
Albanese has cast the agreement as a “watershed moment” in relations with its major closest neighbor, saying in a statement ahead of his arrival in Jakarta late Thursday, that it marks a major extension of existing security and defense cooperation and reflects a relationship “as strong as it has ever been.” He is traveling with Foreign Minister Penny Wong, who called it the most important step in the partnership in three decades.
Analysts said the treaty is becoming increasingly important to Australia in face of growing tensions with China in the region. However, it is expected to echo elements of a 1995 security agreement inked between then-Prime Minister Paul Keating and Indonesia’s former authoritarian President Suharto — Prabowo ‘s former father-in-law.
That agreement committed both nations to consult on security issues and respond to adverse challenges, but was terminated by Indonesia four years later following Australia’s decision to lead a peacekeeping mission into East Timor. The two countries improved their security relationship over the next decade by signing a new treaty in 2006, known as the Lombok Treaty, which they expanded on in 2014.
Susannah Patton from the Lowy Institute, a Sydney-based international policy think tank, said the agreement, whose text has not been published, is largely about the political commitment to consult. She described it as a “symbolic agreement,” noting the 2024 defense cooperation accord was more focused on practical military collaboration.
Patton said the new treaty sits below Australia’s alliance with the United States and the security agreement signed with Papua New Guinea in terms of obligations. She did not expect to find clarity in the agreement on whether Indonesia would come to Australia’s defense in the event of a security threat in the region.
“So it’s very much not a mutual defense treaty because I think that would not be politically acceptable to Indonesia as a non-aligned country,” Patton said.
Despite that, she praised the agreement as a huge success for Albanese, because not many people would have predicted this kind of agreement would be possible with Indonesia as a non-aligned country with “a very big difference between the way that Australia and Indonesia see the world.”
She said that Australia has very much taken advantage of the fact that the Southeast Asia country is now under Prabowo, a president who is really much more willing to break with Indonesian foreign policy tradition and to strike leader-led agreements.
Albanese’s office framed the visit as his fifth official trip to Indonesia and part of a broader push to expand cooperation beyond security into trade, investment, education and development.
Albanese is scheduled to meet Prabowo and Indonesian officials through Sunday before returning to Australia.
Although Indonesia, a vast archipelago nation of more than 280 million people, is often presented as one of Australia’s most important neighbors and strategic allies, the relationship has undergone various ups and downs. Recent disagreements include allegations of wiretapping by the Australian Signals Directorate to monitor the private phone calls of Indonesia’s former President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, his wife and other senior officials, as well as Indonesia’s execution of Australian drug smugglers, and cases of people smuggling.