DINA, Pakistan (AFP)
Thousands of Pakistani lawyers and workers neared Islamabad on Friday on the final leg of a "long march" to demand the reinstatement of judges sacked by President Pervez Musharraf.
Cheering crowds turned out in towns along the route to welcome the cavalcade of around 400 cars and buses which left the eastern city of Lahore late Thursday.
Security officials said 6,000 paramilitary troops and police were deployed in the capital ahead of the arrival of the lawyers, who say they will stage a sit-in outside parliament to press the government to restore the judges.
"Parliament must now respect the sentiments of people, the people have spoken and they want the restoration of the judges," Supreme Court Bar Association chief Aitzaz Ahsan, who is leading the march, told AFP.
"The parliament should not waste time now and restore them. We will continue our long marches until the judges are restored," said Ahsan, a close aide of deposed chief justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry who led the campaign against Musharraf's attempts to fire him.
Lawyers said they expected to arrive in Islamabad at around 9 pm (1600 GMT) after completing the 276-kilometer (173 mile) journey from Lahore, the culmination of a nationwide journey that began on Monday.
Authorities unrolled coils of barbed wire and installed shipping containers to block the parliament and the presidency in Islamabad. Armored personnel vehicles were stationed at several points.
Musharraf sacked Chaudhry and around 60 other judges during a state of emergency on November 3 when it appeared they would overturn his re-election as president the previous month. He also tried to fire him earlier in the year.
The new coalition government led by the parties of slain former premier Benazir Bhutto and ex-PM Nawaz Sharif, which defeated Musharraf's allies in elections in February, has vowed to restore the judges.
But it has been hobbled so far by disagreements over the mechanics, given that bringing back Chaudhry could both lead to a standoff with Musharraf and also threaten an amnesty given to Bhutto's husband on graft charges.
Sharif pulled his party's ministers from the cabinet in May over the issue.
He told the protesters in Lahore on Thursday night that he "will not sit peacefully till the reinstatement of the judges." |
