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Pakistan PM Nawaz Sharif confronted by thousands of protesters

Hundreds of people are injured as Pakistani police battled throngs of protesters demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif with tear gas, batons and rubber bullets outside the prime minister's official residence and the adjacent parliament building.

100s injured after Pakistani police charged with batons, fired tear gas and rubber bullets

A protester tries to stop fellow protesters from attacking riot police while going towards the prime minister's house on August 30. (Zohra Bensemra/Reuters)

Hundreds of people were injured this weekend as Pakistani police battled throngs of protesters demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif with tear gas, batons and rubber bullets outside the prime minister's official residence and the adjacent parliament building.

After a night of clashes, protesters started regrouping at daybreak Sunday and made repeated attempts to make their way through heavy deployment of police and barricades to reach the premier's residence. Police strengthened their lines and responded by lobbing tear gas canisters.

More than 300 people were injured in the clashes.

Scores of protesters, mainly women carrying hammers and iron rods, broke down a fence outside the parliament building, enabling hundreds of people to enter the lawns and parking area, according to an Associated Press photographer at the scene and Pakistani television reports.

Islamabad police chief Khalid Khattak said the protesters were armed with big hammers, wire cutters and axes, and even had a crane.

Thousands of supporters of Tahir ul-Qadri, Sufi cleric and leader of political party Pakistan Awami Tehreek (PAT), protested outside the prime minister's house on August 30, demanding that he step down. (Faisal Mahmood/Reuters)
Defence Minister Khwaja Mohammad Asif said police later managed to clear most of the protesters from the parliament building's parking area and lawns.

"Now only women and children are there, and they can take shelter there as long as they want."

Nearly 125 people, including women, children and police officers, were admitted to two government hospitals in the Pakistani capital, medics and police said.

The injured had wounds from tear gas shells, batons and rubber bullets, said Dr. Tanvir Malik and another doctor who identified herself only as Ms. Abida.

The protest leaders, cricket-legend-turned politician Imran Khan and anti-government cleric Tahirul Qadri, had called on supporters staging a sit-in for days outside the parliament building to march on the prime minister's residence and the legislative chamber.

About 20,000 police in riot gear were deployed to block the procession.

Police action against crowd called illegal

In speeches, Khan and Qadri called for protesters to remain peaceful and urged security forces to restrain from using force. Protests demanding Sharif's resignation were also taking place in Lahore, Karachi and other Pakistani cities, according to TV reports.

Over a hundred people injured by tear gas and rubber bullets fired by Pakistani police to disperse thousands of protesters massed outside the residence of Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on Saturday. (Faisal Mahmood/Reuters)
Khan described the police action against the crowd as illegal.

"Now we will show this government, we will call for countrywide agitation and we will jam the whole of Pakistan," Khan said.

Sharif's spokesman Asif Kirmani said the government had to use force after protesters tried to attack the centre of state power in the capital.

Kirmani said that Sharif was not at the residence during the protests, but was at his ancestral home in the eastern city of Lahore.

"A state can't be left at the mercy of some thousand people," Kirmani said in an interview with Geo News TV.

Riot police were deployed to disperse protesters gathered outside the parliament house on August 30. The masses were marching towards the Pakistani prime minister's home. (Zohra Bensemra/Reuters)
Asma Jehangir, a human rights activist and political commentator, urged the government to take necessary measures to protect women and children in the protest, but criticized protest leaders for claiming that the demonstration would remain peaceful.

"It is like if you say 'a peaceful robbery"' she said.

Khan and Qadri, a dual Pakistani-Canadian citizen with a wide following, allege that Sharif won the 2013 election due to massive voter fraud and should step down. They also have demanded reforms in Pakistan's electoral system to prevent voter fraud.

PM says he will not step down

Protesters are displeased with the Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's efforts to find a negotiated solution to the country's political crisis. (Akhtar Soomro/Reuters)
Backed by parliament and many political parties, Sharif has said he will not step down. Government negotiators have tried to convince Qadri and Khan to end their protest.

The protests began with a march from the eastern city of Lahore on the country's Independence Day, Aug. 14, that reached Islamabad a day later. Khan and Qadri had called for millions of protesters to join but crowds have not been more than tens of thousands.

The protesters' presence and heightened security measures have affected life and badly harmed business in the capital.

The protesters initially camped at another thoroughfare, but moved outside the parliament on Aug. 19. Until Saturday, the rallies had remained festive, with families picnicking and men and women dancing to drums and national songs.

'They fired tear gas shells at us'

Riot police initially showed restraint during Saturday's march but when the crowd started removing shipping containers used as barricades, they fired salvos of tear gas canisters that forced the crowds back.

TV footage showed protesters, including women and children, scattering in retreat. Some fell to the ground and many protesters, including several children, were shown in TV reports being treated for the effects of tear gas.

Police refused to give any estimate about the size of the crowd that had been headed toward the prime minister's residence.

"They fired tear gas shells at us," said Ahsanullah Fakhri, 28, who was bleeding from his leg as he exited an ambulance with other injured protesters.  "I think they are also firing some bullets, I think rubber bullets," he added.

Interior Minister Nisar Ali Khan visited the scene of the protests to boost police morale.

"A group wanted to capture the prime minister's house and other buildings. We are under oath, and the police as well, to protect the state assets," he told reporters at the scene.