ISLAMABAD: Thousands of supporters of the Tehreek-i-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) religious party remained camped in Wazirabad, a city some 190 kilometers from the federal capital, on Monday, continuing their protest sit-in for the fourth consecutive day.
On Sunday, the government announced it had signed a peace agreement with the banned group while the party said it would not call off its now over a week-long protest until the release of its chief Saad Rizvi who has been in jail since April for inciting violence against the state.
Details of Sunday’s pact were not shared with the public by either side.
“Tehreek-i-Labbaik Pakistan workers on Monday abandoned their long march to Islamabad after the proscribed group’s leadership inked an agreement with the government, but continued their sit-in in Wazirabad for a fourth day,” the Dawn newspaper reported.
On Sunday, the government set up a steering committee led by State Minister for Parliamentary Affairs Ali Mohammad Khan to make a strategy for Rizvi’s release and the removal of the ban on his party.
“This dharna [sit-in] will be called off completely after the release of Saad Rizvi,” Mufti Muneeb-ur-Rehman, TLP’s chief negotiator, told protesters in Wazirabad on Sunday.
The protest would continue in a nearby park in the city “until the government will fulfill at least fifty percent of the demands,” he said.
The outlawed group also announced the reopening of the Grand Trunk Road for traffic from Monday, which it had closed down for four days.
The TLP has been demanding the release of its chief and the expulsion of the French envoy from Pakistan over the publication of caricatures of Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him) in France last year. The government proscribed the party in April for inciting violence against the state and it is now pushing the government to lift the ban.
“The word ‘proscribed’ with the TLP will be removed and the process may take a week,” Rehman said, while referring to the agreement signed with the government. “The agreement will be implemented [by the government] in letter and spirit.”
“We will come back with full might,” the cleric warned the government, if it dared to back out of its commitments.
The TLP began a long march toward Islamabad from Lahore on October 22 after violent clashes with law enforcement personnel that led to the deaths of two policemen. Two more policemen were killed and several others injured in similar incidents in Muridke and Sadhoke as protesters forced their way past barricades while moving toward the capital.
Shortly after announcing the agreement with the TLP, the government released two members of the group’s advisory council (majlis-e-shura), Dr. Mohammad Shafiq Amini and Pir Syed Zaheerul Hassan Shah, who then joined TLP supporters at the Wazirabad sit-in.
“This agreement [with the government] will be considered null and void if any of the [TLP] members or a leader is arrested from today onwards,” Rehman said, urging TLP activists to stay united: “This is the start of our journey, not the end.”
Sit-in by supporters of banned Pakistani group enters fourth day despite deal with government
https://arab.news/y5qnr
Sit-in by supporters of banned Pakistani group enters fourth day despite deal with government
- Supporters of Tehreek-i-Labbaik Pakistan remain camped in Wazirabad city about190 kilometers from Islamabad
- On Sunday, government announced peace agreement with TLP, details of pact were not shared with the public
Pakistan rejects Amnesty claims of Israeli spyware use, calls reports ‘disinformation’
- FO denies any link with Israel, says Pakistan has “absolutely no cooperation” on surveillance tools
- Islamabad accuses India of delaying clearance for relief aircraft bound for flood-hit Sri Lanka
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Friday rejected an Amnesty International report alleging the use of Israeli-made invasive spyware in the country, calling the findings speculative and misleading.
Amnesty’s investigation, published Thursday under the title Intellexa Leaks, cited the case of a Pakistan-based human rights lawyer who reported receiving a suspicious WhatsApp link in 2025. According to Amnesty International’s Security Lab, the link bore signatures consistent with Predator, a spyware product developed by Israeli manufacturer c
Foreign Office spokesperson Tahir Andrabi dismissed the suggestion that Islamabad had deployed the tool or maintained any technological cooperation with Israel.
“These are all media speculations. These are all rumor-mongering and disinformation. There is absolutely no cooperation between Pakistan and Israel on anything, let alone a spyware or these kinds of tools. So, I would reject it quite emphatically,” he said at a weekly briefing.
Andrabi also accused India of obstructing humanitarian operations, saying New Delhi delayed flight clearance for a Pakistani relief aircraft carrying aid to flood-affected Sri Lanka.
“The special aircraft carrying Pakistan’s relief goods had to wait for 48 hours, in fact more than 48 hours, around 60 hours, while the flight clearance from India was delayed,” he said.
He added that the eventual conditional flight window was too narrow to be workable.
“The partial flight clearance which eventually was given after 48 hours was operationally impractical, time-bound just for a few hours and hence not operable, severely hindering the urgent need for the relief mission for the brotherly people of Sri Lanka,” Andrabi stated.
“Humanitarian assistance is like justice, if it is delayed, it is denied.”
Responding to India’s claim that clearance was granted within four hours, he said Pakistan has documentary proof contradicting New Delhi’s version.
On a separate question about reported delays in the arrival of a Turkish delegation aimed at mediating between Islamabad and Kabul, Andrabi said Pakistan welcomed Ankara’s initiative but was unaware of the cause of postponement.
“We stand ready to receive the Turkish delegation. That delegation has not arrived as yet. And I’m not aware of any schedule. Pakistan is ready to hold negotiations, discussions,” he said, adding that the delay may be linked to coordination with the Afghan side.










