Pak released the hardline Islamic leader who deals to end the violence – News2IN
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Pak released the hardline Islamic leader who deals to end the violence

Pak released the hardline Islamic leader who deals to end the violence
Written by news2in

New Delhi: The Pakistani government on Thursday released a strong Islamic leader and Pakistani Tehrik-e-Labaic Head (TLP) Saad Rizvi as part of an agreement to end the weeks of his followers who turned off by his followers.
Saad Hussain Rizvi, Head of the Sunni militant group, was released from prison in Lahore City, a spokesman for the Government of Having Khawar told Reuters.
Last week, the government has removed the name Rizvi from the terrorism watch list.
“With God’s grace, he is a free man now,” said his lawyer Muhammad Rizwan.
The Pakistani media has reported that the Government of Imran Khan has completed an agreement with the phone that it will free its members, including Rizvi, in return for the protest.
Pakistani community party opposition (PPP) strongly criticized the agreement between TLP and the government, described it as a “submission by the government”.
Plan to keep a group of terror groups? Hebdo.
The group also demanded the expulsion of France’s envoy.
The group, which can mobilize thousands of supporters, was born in 2015 from a protest campaign to seek the release of a police guard who killed a provincial governor in 2011 for his call to reform the law.
In addition to breastfeeding several demands, the Pakistani government also allows TLP for contests in elections.
It has entered politics in 2017 and surprisingly political elite by securing more than 2 million votes in the 2018 election.
Mainstream political parties in Pakistan often form alliances with terror groups and use religion to advance their political agenda.
These short strategies always cause long-term damage, according to American political scientists Paul Santillan wrote in the 2015 edition of the Journal of Conflence Resolution.
According to Dawn, TLP has been, on various occasions, showing the “street power” and the ability to account for the country’s main political party sound bank.
The next national election in Pakistan is scheduled for 2023, and analysts expect political groups to begin preparing from the beginning of next year.
(With input from the agency)

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