Food, water and fuel shortages hit interior Sindh amid protests
HYDERABAD: Food, water and fuel shortages hit the entire Sindh province on Friday owing to severe disruption in supplies caused by religious activists’ sit-ins on many roads of almost all cities and towns on the third consecutive day of protest against the recent Supreme Court verdict that overturned the death sentence awarded to Aasia Bibi.
Big and small groups of activists and supporters of Tehreek-i-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP), Ittehad Ahle Sunnat (IAS), Jamaat-i-Islami (JI), Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam-Fazl (JUI-F), Jamiat Ulema-i-Pakistan-Noorani (JUP-N), Pakistan Sunni Tehreek (PST) proscribed Ahle Sunnat Wal Jamaat (ASWJ) and many less-known and previously unknown entities took out rallies in different cities and towns to express their support to the call for a review of the SC verdict.
In Hyderabad, the biggest group of protesters continued the sit-in at Hyder Chowk amid a complete shutdown across the city on Friday. The group was led by TLP’s Sahibzada Noorul Hassan Jilani, Khalid Hassan Attari of PST and Qari Ahmed Ali Saeedi of IAS.
Taj Mohammad Nahiyoon of JUI-F, Syed Asim Shah of ASWJ and Dr Younus Danish of JUP-N led their respective rallies that ended outside the local press club. Strong contingents of police and Rangers remained deployed at sensitive places to ward off any untoward incident but did not intervene in the protest.
JI’s Tahir Majeed and Milli Muslim League’s Faisal Nadeem also led separate rallies taken out from Station Road and Markaz Saad Bin Maaz, respectively.
In Sukkur, Jacobabad, Ghotki and Kandhkot-Kashmore districts, the religious parties and groups organised protest rallies and sit-ins in district headquarters and many other cities and towns. Activists of Hussaini Jamaat, Jamatus Sualeheen and Qadri Tehreek also took part in the protest.
In Larkana, component parties of the Muttahida Majlis-i-Amal took out a rally from Madressah Isha’atul Quran. It ended at the main gate of Jinnahbagh, where the participants held a sit-in.
Protest rallies and sit-ins were also held in almost all shutdown-hit towns of Dadu, Jamshoro, Shaheed Benazirabad, Mirpurkhas, Tharparkar and Badin districts.
Leaders of the participating parties and groups led their respective rallies and vowed to continue the protest till the demand was met. There were no signs of an end to the life-crippling protest until the electronic media aired the news, at about 9.30pm, about an agreement, between the federal government and top leaders of the campaign.
The protesters holding sit-ins at countless places, however, kept waiting for directives from their top leadership in Rawalpindi/Islamabad whether to end the protest.
Published in Dawn, November 3rd, 2018