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Pakistani ex-PM Sharif 'detained' | Pakistani ex-PM Sharif 'detained' |
(30 minutes later) | |
Pakistani opposition leader Nawaz Sharif has been placed under house arrest, his party has said. | Pakistani opposition leader Nawaz Sharif has been placed under house arrest, his party has said. |
Police have surrounded his home in the city of Lahore. But the interior ministry chief told the BBC there were no restrictions Mr Sharif's movements. | |
Mr Sharif, a former prime minister, had planned to lead a protest march on the capital, Islamabad, on Monday. | |
Tensions between President Asif Ali Zardari's government and Mr Sharif's party have risen in recent months. | Tensions between President Asif Ali Zardari's government and Mr Sharif's party have risen in recent months. |
Riot police surrounded Mr Sharif's home on Saturday night, hours before he was to address a demonstration in Lahore. | |
"A senior police officer is here and he informed Mr Sharif that he's been detained for three days," said party spokesman Pervez Rasheed. | |
According to Pakistani media, police baton-charged the politician's supporters when they came to protest. | |
His brother, Shahbaz, also a senior politician, is said to be in hiding the garrison city of Rawalpindi near Islamabad. | |
Mr Sharif's Pakistan Muslim League - Nawaz (PML-N) says a number of opposition leaders have also been placed under house arrest. | Mr Sharif's Pakistan Muslim League - Nawaz (PML-N) says a number of opposition leaders have also been placed under house arrest. |
'Dismay' | 'Dismay' |
Mr Sharif has been part of the campaign to reinstate judges who were sacked by former President Pervez Musharraf. | |
Mr Sharif has vowed to keep up demonstrations until the judges are brought back, in line with a promise made by President Zardari when he took office last year. | |
Rallies calling for the reinstatement of sacked judges have been banned | Rallies calling for the reinstatement of sacked judges have been banned |
The protests over the judges have become the arena for a power struggle between Mr Sharif and President Zardari, says the BBC's Barbara Plett in Islamabad. | |
Anti-government demonstrators from across Pakistan have been planning to converge on Islamabad for a sit-in to demand the judges' reinstatement. | |
The government, led by Mr Zardari's Pakistan People's Party (PPP), has set up roadblocks to halt what is being called a "long march", and banned political gatherings saying they could trigger violence. | |
Our correspondent says so far the authorities have broken up the main procession by arresting activists and blocking roads, and the capital has been sealed. | |
They are determined to prevent activists from reaching Islamabad and staging an indefinite sit-in in front of parliament, she says. | |
PML-N spokesman Ahsan Iqbal told the BBC: "We are very dismayed, disappointed that this government of President Zardari is using all these undemocratic measures... to crack down on a very peaceful movement." | |
But interior ministry chief Rehman Malik told the BBC Mr Sharif was free to go anywhere and the police outside his house were for his own protection. | |
"I categorically confirm no restraining orders, no arrest warrant, no house arrest. He's totally free to move anywhere in the country," Mr Malik said. | |
He added: "We are under heavy threat of the terrorists... and that has been conveyed to Mr Nawaz Sahirf, Shahbaz Sharif and other political leaders." | |
From hiding, the party's secretary general, Iqbal Zafar Jhagra, told the BBC that President Zardari was a "civilian dictator" who was trying to outdo his predecessor President Musharraf. | |
Gen Musharraf led a military coup in 1999 that ousted then-Prime Minister Sharif, and ruled until 2008. | |
Long-running tensions | Long-running tensions |
The tensions between Mr Zardari and Mr Sharif date back to the 1990s, but the two formed a brief partnership in government following parliamentary elections in February 2008. | The tensions between Mr Zardari and Mr Sharif date back to the 1990s, but the two formed a brief partnership in government following parliamentary elections in February 2008. |
Deja-vu in crackdownQ&A: Pakistan political instability | |
Mr Sharif's PML-N withdrew from the alliance in August 2008, complaining about the PPP's reluctance to reinstate former Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry and other judges sacked by President Musharraf. | Mr Sharif's PML-N withdrew from the alliance in August 2008, complaining about the PPP's reluctance to reinstate former Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry and other judges sacked by President Musharraf. |
Relations have been further strained in recent weeks by a Supreme Court decision to ban Mr Sharif and his brother Shahbaz from elected office, and President Zardari's decision to put their stronghold in Punjab province under direct rule from Islamabad. | Relations have been further strained in recent weeks by a Supreme Court decision to ban Mr Sharif and his brother Shahbaz from elected office, and President Zardari's decision to put their stronghold in Punjab province under direct rule from Islamabad. |
Shahbaz Sharif was Punjab's chief minister. | Shahbaz Sharif was Punjab's chief minister. |
But on Saturday, in a move seen as a conciliatory gesture, the government agreed to seek a review of the Supreme Court ruling. | |
The political instability comes as Pakistan faces an economic crisis and a growing militant insurgency based in the north-west. | The political instability comes as Pakistan faces an economic crisis and a growing militant insurgency based in the north-west. |
In a sign that the militancy is spreading, the visiting Sri Lankan cricket team was attacked in Lahore earlier in March. | In a sign that the militancy is spreading, the visiting Sri Lankan cricket team was attacked in Lahore earlier in March. |
Up to 14 gunmen took part in the attack which killed six policemen and a driver, and injured eight tour members. | Up to 14 gunmen took part in the attack which killed six policemen and a driver, and injured eight tour members. |