Protests prompt Pakistan to talk to banned extremist group TLP

Pakistan began talks with an extremist group it banned last week, in an effort to control religious violence that has become a major challenge to Prime Minister Imran Khan as he struggles to revive the economy.
Talks are taking place between the Khan administration and
Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP), an Islamist party calling for the expulsion
of the French envoy, after violent protests in Lahore, Pakistan's second
largest city, killed at least three people last Sunday, according to a
statement by Interior Minister Sheikh Rasheed Ahmad and local media reports.
Rasheed said that the banned group released the 11 police officers they had
taken hostage earlier in the day.
Prime Minister Khan said in a televised address that
Pakistan could not afford to expel the French ambassador because that would
amount to severing ties with the European Union. He said such protests would
harm the country economically, adding that he would start a global campaign
against blasphemy.
Days of riots prompted the Khan government to ban TLP last
Thursday, but that did not stop protests calling for the expulsion of the
French ambassador due to comments by French President Emmanuel Macron last year
regarding the publication of cartoons mocking the Prophet Muhammad (peace and
blessings upon him). Businesses and shops were partially closed in Karachi and
Lahore at the call of merchant groups to protest the government action, and the
main stock exchange slumped 1.5% before recovering some of the losses.
Hamza Kamal, chief investment analyst at Karachi-based AKD
Securities Ltd., said the shares were down due to the political uncertainty
caused by the strike and the protests, adding, “It is weighing down on investor
sentiment.”
TLP, which initially paralyzed the country with violent
protests three years ago and forced the then-minister of law and justice to
resign, emerged as a powerful political force when it ranked sixth in the 2018
national elections with 2.2 million votes.
Last year, it called off its protest after the Khan
government agreed to seek parliamentary approval to expel the French
ambassador, and last week the group staged nationwide protests that left two
policemen dead.
The Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists (PFUJ), the
largest group representing the media in the country, is also protesting the
crackdown on coverage of the protests by the Pakistan Electronic Media
Regulatory Authority (PEMRA), and last Friday the government suspended social media
services, including WhatsApp, Facebook and Twitter, for four hours, in an
unprecedented move aimed at countering the repercussions of the protests.
Pakistan just reached an agreement with the International
Monetary Fund on restarting a $6 billion bailout program after avoiding a
financial crisis just two years ago, and the country has found itself with
little room for policy mistakes as the corona pandemic affects the economy.