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Pakistani police disperse protests in capital Islamabad

Chief Minister of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Ali Amin Gandapur and the current wife of the founder of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI, or the Movement for Justice) opposition party, Bushra Bibi, who led the protests, left the city during the police operation, Naqvi said

ISLAMABAD, November 27. /TASS/. Police and paramilitary forces in Pakistan have dispersed an opposition protest in the country’s capital, Dunya News television quoted Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi as saying.

According to him, now that the operation has been successfully completed, life in Islamabad will return to normal. Restoring motor traffic and public transportation services as soon as possible is the government’s priority, the minister noted. Mobile and internet service will be restored later on Wednesday, while schools in the capital, which have been suspended amid protests, will reopen on Thursday.

Chief Minister of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Ali Amin Gandapur and the current wife of the founder of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI, or the Movement for Justice) opposition party, Bushra Bibi, who led the protests, left the city during the police operation, Naqvi said.

The PTI launched a nationwide protest rally on November 24, demanding that the federal government repeal the constitutional amendments adopted in October, review the results of the February parliamentary election, and release political prisoners, including Imran Khan, the party’s founder and former prime minister.

On Tuesday afternoon, supporters of the ex-premier almost made their way to the D-Chowk square in central Islamabad, near which major government offices, courts, and parliament buildings are located, before Pakistani police and paramilitary units stopped the protesters. Last night, at least 500 opposition activists were detained as police and the Pakistan Rangers, a pair of paramilitary federal law enforcement corps in the South Asian country, cleared downtown Islamabad of protesters.

Earlier on November 27, the party announced it was canceling the protests.