UPDATE - Pakistani forces launch crackdown against protesters

UPDATE - Pakistani forces launch crackdown against protesters

Police fire tear gas at protesters, who are blocking the capital to agitate against election law

UPDATES WITH INJURED, ARRESTS, ARSON

By Islamuddin Sajid

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AA) - At least 130 people including 45 security personnel were wounded on Saturday during a crackdown on protesters, emergency officials said.

The protesters had been blocking the main entrance from Rawalpindi city to capital Islamabad since early November.

"So far 130 injured including 45 police and FC personnel have been shifted to a hospital," Dr. Altaf Husain, spokesman for Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS) hospital, told Anadolu Agency over the phone.

The crackdown came after the country’s top court ordered their removal, after protests paralyzed life in the twin cities and the last of a long series of deadlines lapsed without response from the agitating parties.

On Friday, the local administration had issued a final warning for the protesters to end their sit-in till Saturday morning or face strict action.

Local television footage showed security personnel fire tear gas shells on protesters to disperse them -- while the protesters pelted stones.

Angry mobs set fire to four police vans, local broadcaster Geo News reported.

Security forces arrested 150 protesters and shifted them to different police stations in Islamabad.

The protests began with demands that the government restore a key clause about the finality of Prophet Mohammad under the Election Laws.

The clause was restored by the lower house of the parliament last week -- despite that the protests continued.

In a legislation billed last month, which was actually meant to pave way for the former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to return as the ruling party head, following his ouster by the Supreme Court in the Panama Papers scandal this July -- the clause was modified, something which the government called a “clerical mistake”.

According to the restored clause, the voters at the time of registration for the general elections have to declare that they believe in the finality of Prophet Mohammad, failing which, their names will be included in a separate list for Ahmedis or Qadianis -- a minority sect which was declared non-Muslim by the parliament in 1974.

The religious groups blamed the ruling Pakistani Muslim League (Nawaz) party, mainly the Law Minister Zahid Hamid for “deliberately” modifying the clauses to favor the minority sect.

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