As PTI got ready for a march in the southern Punjab province, the Punjab government on Tuesday implemented Section 144(6) in Faisalabad, Bahawalpur, and Mianwali, therefore preventing all kind of public gathering.
PTI has organized several protests around the nation to “save the constitution,” denounce the “illegal” arrest of the party chairman, and express disapproval of ECP’s tardiness in implementing the Supreme Court’s ruling regarding reserved seats.
Every occasion, confrontations between PTI members and the authorities have resulted from the government issuing a set of stringent regulations before to the demonstrations.
Imran Khan, who is currently incarcerated, issued a new demand yesterday for nationwide demonstrations in support of the “independence of [the] judiciary,” which included a march in Islamabad, where such events are prohibited.
The PTI founder has announced that tomorrow the party will stage protests in Bahawalpur, Faisalabad, and Mianwali.
A further announcement was made regarding “large protests in Multan, Mianwali, and Faisalabad on October 2” by PTI Central Information Secretary Sheikh Waqas Akram.
“You have an obligation to come out,” Waqas stated.
The Punjab Interior Ministry issued separate notifications today for Mianwali, Faisalabad, and Bahawalpur, stating that PTI’s planned rallies tomorrow may be targeted by “terrorists” who may use the opportunity to “carry out subversive activities as [a] lot of threat alerts have been received.”
The alerts, copies of that are available through Dawn.com, stated that the nation’s current state of law and order gave lawbreakers a “soft target” and a “serious security threat.”
They stated that there were enough justifications to move forward under Section 144 in order to protect the districts’ tranquility, people’s safety, and their property.
The announcement for Bahawalpur and Faisalabad forbade “all
PTI rallies
PTI has organized several political events in Punjab and the capital, but under the pretense of civil disobedience, law enforcement officials have interfered.
A day after the PTI presented its Sangjani power show last month, ten PTI MNAs were taken into custody under the Anti-Terrorism Act and the recently enforced Peaceful Assembly and Public Order Act 2024.
Meanwhile, after brief speeches by leaders to supporters in Kahna in the provincial capital’s Ring Road district on September 21, the party’s Lahore power show came to an anticlimactic close as lights went out and police officers vacated the stage after the 6 p.m. limit.
Containers had been positioned along every path leading to the PTI’s proposed protest venue in Liaquat Bagh, leaving Rawalpindi “under virtual siege” on Saturday.
Over 110 supporters, including party leaders, were taken into custody by Punjab police following altercations during which the stench of tear gas used to scatter the demonstrators filled the air.
All public meetings were forbidden by the government, which also stationed paramilitary personnel in Rawalpindi.
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