PTI SUPPORTERS FORCIBLY ENTER SINDH HOUSE IN ISLAMABAD AFTER HOURS-LONG PROTEST

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ISLAMABAD: PTI supporters on Friday forcibly entered the Sindh House in Islamabad after protesting outside for hours against dissident MNAs who are staying in the building.

Television footage showed PTI workers climbing over the walls of Sindh House with some of them later breaking down the doors to enter the building. They also carried lotas in protest against “turncoats”. Islamabad police later cleared the area and took some of the protesters into custody.

A first information report (FIR) against the protesters was registered at the Secretariat police station on behalf of Qurban Ali Anwar, the station house officer who was posted there.

The FIR, a copy of which is available, was registered under Sections 427 (mischief causing damage to the amount of fifty rupees), 186 (obstructing a public servant in discharge of public functions), 188 (disobedience to an order duly promulgated by a public servant), 147 (punishment for rioting) and 149 (members of an unlawful assembly being guilty of committing an offence in the prosecution of a common object) of the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC).

According to the FIR, around 15 to 20 PTI members were trying to enter the Sindh House, which is located in the Red Zone where all political activities and protests are banned under Section 144 of the PPC.

The FIR said police personnel reached the spot and asked the protesters to disperse but they did not listen.

The protesters raised slogans and uprooted a gate of the Sindh House in an attempt to enter its premises, the FIR said, adding that 13 of the protesters were subsequently arrested.

‘Act of terrorism’

PPP Chairperson Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari dubbed the storming an “act of terrorism” and equated it to an attack on Sindh.

In a statement, he said the “attack” on the Sindh House was “planned” and that “Imran Khan has shown his spite for Sindh by directing [PTI workers] to carry our the attack”.

“We don’t tale law into our hands but we know how to deal with unruly elements,” he added.

Bilawal said the “attack on residences of public representatives and judges” was in violation of chadar and chardiwari.

“Imran Khan has been perturbed after seeing his [impending] defeat [in the no-trust vote],” he added.

Meanwhile, PPP Co-Chairperson Asif Ali Zardari also condemned the incident.

He said in a statement that if the prime minister had the support of enough lawmakers, he would have shown his strength in parliament instead of getting Parliament Lodges and the Sindh House attacked.

“The people of Pakistan are seeing who is abiding by democratic values and who wants to drive the country towards anarchy,” he added.

PPP leader Sharjeel Memon termed the storming a “failure” of Islamabad police and the interior ministry, saying “we consider the attack on Sindh House an attack on the Sindh province.”

The way PTI federal ministers had been questioning why policemen from Sindh were deployed at the building had received their answer now, he said. He claimed that two PTI MNAs — Faheem Khan and Ataullah — were also part of the group that stormed the Sindh House.

“When they were taking such actions, Islamabad police were silent. If Sindh police were not there today, PPP MNAs who were staying inside with their families would be in danger. Imran Khan has been defeated. Now he wants a clash.”