Drawing a Line

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For once, Pakistan’s state has spoken with a single, coherent voice. The federal government’s formal ban on the Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP), following the Punjab government’s decisive crackdown, signals an overdue realignment in the country’s relationship with violent religio-political power.
It is a moment that belongs as much to the writ of the Constitution as to the courage of Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz Sharif, whose administration convinced the federation to act where previous governments had folded.
What had begun as a so-called “solidarity march for Gaza” earlier this month swiftly mutated into violent street warfare. Roads were blocked, state property torched, and policemen martyred. That commentators were left wondering what the protest was actually about speaks volumes.
Was it Gaza or was it power, the audacity of a movement that has long tested how far it can blackmail the state in the name of faith? This time, the state did not blink.
The Punjab government detained thousands of activists, froze assets, and invoked the Anti-Terrorism Act to restrict leadership. Islamabad has also followed with a formal notification outlawing the party and its front organisations nationwide.
The symbolism is unmistakable. For decades, Pakistan’s response to religious militancy oscillated between denial and compromise. The TLP, and many others, thrived in that ambiguity–mainstreamed when convenient, banned when violent, and forgiven when politically useful.
That cycle is now under direct challenge. The joint resolve of Lahore and Islamabad represents something long missing in Pakistan’s counter-extremism playbook: institutional consensus. But a ban is not a cure. At best, it is a beginning. Pakistan has banned more than eighty outfits over the past twenty-five years, many of which re-emerged under new names.
The true test lies in follow-through, may it be prosecutions in anti-terror courts, financial disruption of networks, and the steady dismantling of the ideological ecosystem that feeds violent populism. The Punjab government’s move to identify thousands of financiers is an essential precedent, and now, the federation must match that administrative stamina with judicial persistence.
If the courts sustain this ban, if the prosecutions hold, if the message is consistent, Pakistan will have done more than silence one organisation. It will have reclaimed its moral centre. The battle ahead is not between secularism and faith, but between the rule of law and the rule of the mob.