Long March to Islamabad

Posted on June 12, 2008
Filed Under >Owais Mughal, Politics
65 Comments
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Owais Mughal

Trafic Route and blocks for Lawyers Long March on IslamabadThe long march which started at Karachi and Quetta on June 9, 2008 is near Islamabad now. It is scheduled to reach Islamabad on June 13.

The map on the left, from Dawn, shows the Islamabad Police’s plan to “manage” the march. It highlights the roads that the lawyers and other people living in Islamabad can and cannot use.

In a positive development, the lawyers have agreed to a detailed agreement with the government to keep the march peaceful. We certainly hope it is so.

Details from Dawn:

The government and representatives of the legal community signed a 20-point agreement on Thursday to maintain law and order in the federal capital where lawyers’ long march and protest programme will culminate on Friday. The organisers of the protest march have been told that they will be responsible for any disturbance in the city on the occasion. “The agreement has been signed with the consent of coalition partners and representatives of lawyers’ community,” Information Minister Sherry Rehman said at a press briefing on Thursday.

The agreement has been signed by Islamabad’s Deputy Commissioner Amir Ali and Rawalpindi Bar Association President Sardar Attaullah and Islamabad Bar Association (IBA) Secretary General Riasat Ali Azad. The community assured the government that the march would not enter the Constitution Avenue which has been declared ‘red zone’ and will be cordoned off during the protest programme. “Due to safety of diplomatic enclave and other important buildings, including the Parliament House, the area has been declared red zone and no one will be allowed to enter into it,” the minister said.

“But in case of any violation of the agreement and law and order situation, the responsibility will devolve on the organisers,” she said. The minister said PPP co-chairman Asif Ali Zardari would provide food to the lawyers while the local administration would provide water and make arrangements for toilets. She said that the route and final destination of the protesters had been decided. The government, she said, had accepted the demands of lawyers and would facilitate them in setting up dais at the agreed venue at the parade ground, the area close to the Parliament House.

Giving details about the agreed route of the long march in Islamabad, she said the participants would enter the federal capital between 11am and 2pm on Friday from Faizabad and after going through the Zero Point, Kashmir Highway, Abpara Chowk, Suhrawardy Road and Embassy Road they would reach the parade ground. Meanwhile, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani presided over a meeting of a committee formed to finalise security arrangements for the long march and expressed satisfaction over the agreement signed by the two sides.The meeting was attended by Prime Minister’s Adviser on Interior Rehman Malik, Ms Sherry Rehman, Labour Minister Khurshid Shah, Law Minister Farooq Naek and PML-N leaders Ishaq Dar, Ahsan Iqbal and Khawaja Asif.

The information minister said the lawyers’ representatives had assured the government that they would remain peaceful. The minister said there was no possibility of any PPP leader, including the prime minister, taking part in the lawyers’ programme. Security departments sealed the Constitution Avenue on Thursday night with large containers on all entry points, but some lawyers who had come from Sialkot to take part in the march, managed to enter the red zone. However, they were persuaded by security officials to leave the area.

Paramilitary force and police from Punjab have reached Islamabad to assist the local police in maintaining law and order. About 16 close-circuit cameras have been installed at different places near the venue of the protest meeting with control rooms at the district administration office and the interior ministry.Security departments have also installed more than a dozen security gates to stop suspects from joining the gathering. Dozens of police pickets have been set up on different roads in the city where vehicles are being searched. Armed personnel carriers equipped with anti-riot equipments, including tear-gas shells and rubber bullets have been placed to cope with any breakdown in security.

According to Daily News of June 13, 2008:

The lawyers’ long march caravans comprising political workers, civil society and members of different organisations, left Lahore for Islamabad on Thursday night amidst loud anti-Musharraf and anti-Zardari sloganeering. They vowed to restore the sacked judges of the Supreme Court by laying a siege to the Parliament House and the presidency. The march, which began from Karachi on Monday, gradually swelled in size and strength after passing through different cities including Sukkur, Multan, Bahawalpur, Sahiwal and Lahore.It will culminate in a huge rally in Rawalpindi and a long sit-in outside the Parliament House Islamabad on Friday to press for the restoration of the deposed judges of the superior courts to the pre-November 3, 2007 position, and independence of the judiciary as enshrined in the 1973 Constitution.

65 responses to “Long March to Islamabad”

  1. Abdul Hai says:

    Thank you Alibhae and Harris Siddiqui for personal attacks . I commend Pakistaniat for allowing different view points on this blog. The so called free press in Pakistan is still not ready to publish any thing critical of th army.

  2. Ahmad R. Shahid says:

    Salim sahab

    Was it unconstitutional?

  3. Salim says:

    Politician no matter how corrupt, incompetent or whatever never violated the constitution.

    AHMAD shahid Sahib;
    Within 4 hours of passing his own constitution, ZAB amended it for his own benefit.
    SC

  4. Salim says:

    The crowd, mostly lawyers seated in the outdoor area adjacent to the presidential building, responded by chanting,

  5. Ahmad R. Shahid says:

    Harris Siddiqui:

    The problem with corruption is that it can’t be eliminated without the independent judiciary working as a warch dog. True that politicians, when in power, developed bad relations with the judiciary, but it has been the military that has completely destroyed it by bringing in PCOs and doing away with the constitution. Politician no matter how corrupt, incompetent or whatever never violated the constitution. This repeated violation of the constitution has done the greatest damage to the body politic of Pakistan.

    Also the problem with military loot maar is that they have institutionalized corruption. So the corruption is done by not any General or Colonel but by the military as a whole. These lands on which they have incessantly built DHAs was not meant for these purposes but for defence purposes only. Any use of this land apart from defence purposes is corruption. The Generals don’t rest there. They demand even more. One of the conditions put forth by the military to lift the martial law in 1985 was to get sanction for DHA in Karachi. There are so many such instances.

    As for corruption I don’t believe that one can do more corruption in health, when its budget is mere 5 billion, or education, when its budget is mere 24 billion, than in defence where just the Agosta submarine deal was worth more than any of these two combined, almost worth 1 billion dollars. No wonder Admiral Mansurul-Haq had a golf course in his house and owned ranches in Texas. So much for intergrity of the military personnel.

    How political governments are more people centric? One example: the defence budget has decreased this year in real terms, since it was increased by only 7% against 11% corruption. This decrease in defence budget would definitely made available more funds for other sectors.

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