Pakistan diverts cleric's plane to Lahore

June 23, 2014 07:35 pm | Updated May 23, 2016 06:30 pm IST - ISLAMABAD

Supporters of Pakistani cleric Tahirul Qadri, leader of Pakistan Awami Tehreek (PAT) wait at Benazir International airport to receive their leader in Islamabad, Pakistan, Monday, June 23, 2014. Pakistan diverted a passenger plane carrying an anti-government cleric to Lahore on Monday out of security concerns, said an official, leading to a standoff in which the cleric refused for hours to get off the aircraft while it waited on the tarmac. (AP Photo/Anjum Naveed)

Supporters of Pakistani cleric Tahirul Qadri, leader of Pakistan Awami Tehreek (PAT) wait at Benazir International airport to receive their leader in Islamabad, Pakistan, Monday, June 23, 2014. Pakistan diverted a passenger plane carrying an anti-government cleric to Lahore on Monday out of security concerns, said an official, leading to a standoff in which the cleric refused for hours to get off the aircraft while it waited on the tarmac. (AP Photo/Anjum Naveed)

Pakistan diverted a passenger plane carrying an anti-government cleric to Lahore on Monday out of security concerns, said an official, leading to a standoff in which the cleric refused for hours to get off the aircraft while it waited on the tarmac.

The Pakistani cleric, Tahir-ul-Qadri, lives mostly in Canada but has a large following in his network of mosques and religious centres across Pakistan. Last year he threw the capital into crisis for days when he led rallies of thousands of people in the centre of the city to demand electoral reforms.

This time he returned to the limelight and the country promising to lead more rallies against the government.

Qadri was scheduled to arrive on an Emirates flight from Dubai Monday morning, but the flight was first delayed and then diverted in-flight to Lahore, said a spokesman for the Civil Aviation Authority, Abid Qaimkhani.

The cleric’s supporters clashed with police as they tried to get to the airport in Rawalpindi next to the capital, and the police used tear gas to try to keep them away.

Authorities appeared to be preparing for clashes with Qadri’s supporters even before he’d arrived. They cut off cell phone service in parts of Islamabad and Rawalpindi in the morning and used shipping containers to block off access to areas of the city where there are sensitive government offices.

Once in Lahore, the government and Qadri negotiated for hours as officials tried to encourage him to leave the plane.

The cleric first demanded top military figures meet him at the airport to ensure his safety, said provincial Law Minister Rana Mashood. The government instead brought in some of Qadri’ close relatives and party officials to talk to him, said Mashood.

The cleric later demanded an armoured vehicle and guards be brought to the tarmac, Mashood said. The situation was resolved once the provincial Gov. Chaudhry Mohamad Sarwar, called Qadri directly and agreed to meet him at the airport and escort him to his home in Lahore, said Mashood.

Qadri on Twitter accused the government of hijacking the plane and demanded to be taken back to Islamabad. But by late afternoon he said he had accepted an offer to leave the plane with a security escort.

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