Pakistan opened talks with Kashmir protesters as the PM asked to calm down after deadly clashes

Death toll after violent clashes between security forces and protesters in Pakistan-promised Kashmir Reached nine on Thursday as Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif Officials said that a delegation was sent to the area capital to negotiate with the protest leaders.

In a statement, Sharif appealed to calm down and asked the police to exercise restraint. He also said that his government was committed to addressing public grievances in Kashmir.

Tariq Fazal Chaudhary, a minister in Sharif wardrobeIt is written on X that talks were going on with representatives of Awami Action Committee in Muzaffarabad.

At the same time, a convoy of buses and cars was seen moving towards the regional capital Muzaffarabad for another mass protest by local authorities.

Thousands of protesters came to a day later on thousands of protesters to attack and protect government buildings to keep the roads open and protect government buildings and protect government buildings.

The video footage posted online showed violent clashes between the Awami Action Committee and the police related protesters.

Violence began early this week, as a coalition of several groups began protests demanding subsidy on food, electricity and other services.

The region’s Prime Minister Chaudhary Anwarul Haq said on Wednesday that his administration had agreed to accept 36 out of 38 demands of the alliance – which included cheap wheat, power tariffs and local governance reforms were included – but he said that the group had refused to shut down its movement and continued violently instead.

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According to a government statement, at least nine people, including three police officers, have been killed in clashes. More than 150, most of the policemen, have also been injured, it has been said, because the authorities had taken some seriously injured officers. Islamabad hospital.

PakistanThe internal minister of Mohsin Naqvi visited the main hospital in the capital on Thursday, who met the injured officers in the struggle.

A government statement said that Naqvi praised the “courage and restraint” of the authorities and instructed the doctors to provide them the best medical treatment. He said that “no one would be allowed to take the law into their own hands,” saying that some violent elements “at the behest of enemies” were trying to destabilize the region.