Asad Hashim/ Al Jazeera
Interior Minister Sheikh Rasheed, speaking in a video message issued early on Monday, said “a lot of progress” had been made in the first round of negotiations.
“They have released the 11 policemen they had abducted and the people of the TLP have gone into the Rehmat ul Alimeen mosque and police have also moved back,” Rasheed said.
Several policemen and protesters were wounded in clashes on Sunday, which began after TLP activists attacked a police station in the Sodhiwal area of Pakistan’s second city Lahore, police spokesperson Nayab Haider told Al Jazeera.
Protesters retreated on Monday to a nearby TLP mosque, around 2 km (1.2 miles) from the site of Sunday’s clashes, Haider said. Police had also moved back and reduced the number of officers deployed as negotiations took place, he added.
Haider said no policemen had been killed in Sunday’s violence, and that authorities were not aware of any casualties on the TLP’s side.
TLP representatives did not respond to Al Jazeera’s request for comment on Monday.
Meanwhile, several religious parties called a strike on Monday in solidarity with the TLP, with authorities raising security levels in the capital Islamabad and elsewhere.
‘Terrorist organisation’
Last week, the Pakistani government designated the TLP a “terrorist” organisation under anti-terrorism legislation, with authorities saying they would move to have the Election Commission delist the group as a political party.
That move came after days of violent TLP protests in Lahore, the country’s largest city of Karachi, Rawalpindi and elsewhere, as the group demanded the release of its chief Saad Rizvi from police custody.
Founded in 2017, the TLP is a hardline religious group that has held several major countrywide demonstrations on the issue of perceived “blasphemy” against Islam.
Its latest protest movement was launched in November against the French government, after French President Emmanuel Macron made comments that were interpreted by some, including Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan, as “encouraging Islamophobia”.
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