One dead as PTI workers clash with police

One dead as PTI workers clash with police
Updated 08 December 2014
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One dead as PTI workers clash with police

One dead as PTI workers clash with police

FAISALABAD: An opposition party worker was shot dead in Pakistan on Monday as hundreds of protesters clashed with riot police armed with water cannon and batons in the central city of Faisalabad.
The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf (Pakistan Movement for Justice or PTI) party led by Imran Khan had vowed to paralyze the city as part of its efforts to topple the government of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, whom it accuses of poll-rigging.
The death could spark further violence and reinvigorate the opposition movement.
It received a boost Monday when a judge ordered a vote audit in a key constituency, a longstanding demand of Khan.
He has said it will highlight systemic flaws in the 2013 general election which brought Sharif’s party to power.
TV footage showed PTI workers clashing with supporters of Sharif as well as with riot police, who baton-charged them as parts of Faisalabad came to a standstill.
Nabeela Ghazanfar, a spokeswoman for police in Punjab province, told AFP: “One protester has been killed and five others injured including two policemen.
“The Punjab police chief has issued strict orders not to let anybody take the law into their hands.”
A doctor in a Faisalabad hospital confirmed the death from bullet wounds and said five wounded were being treated.
A PTI official on the ground who asked that his name be withheld also said the worker had been shot. TV channels showed a man in civilian clothes wielding a pistol at the rally and blamed him for the killing.
Khan said supporters of Sharif’s party carried out the attack and lashed out at police.
“Peaceful protest is our right and it’s the duty of the state to provide security but the government tried to provoke our protesters,” the cricketer turned politician told reporters outside his home in Islamabad.
“Our workers were being shot at in the presence of the police,” he continued, adding he would address supporters in Faisalabad later Monday evening.
Information Minister Pervez Rashid however blamed Khan for “inciting the people to violence,” as smaller anti-government demonstrations broke out in Islamabad and the central city of Multan.
The clashes came as an election tribunal judge in the eastern city of Lahore accepted Khan’s plea for a vote audit in the constituency of the speaker of the Parliament.