"We have suspended the talks as the government has begun arresting my workers in Islamabad and around the country," Pakistan Awami Tehreek (PAT) chief and populist cleric Tahir-ul Qadri said, deepening the month-long political impasse in the country.
"The government was unwilling to hear out the legitimate grievances of people who had been camped outside the halls of power for a month now," Qadri was quoted as saying by Dawn.
"It is because of these arrests that we have decided to suspend dialogue with the government because they are playing a double game," said Ghulam Ali, an Awami Tehreek spokesman.
PTI General Secretary Jehangir Khan Tareen also told a television channel yesterday that under the prevailing circumstances, it wasn't possible for the party to keep talking to the government.
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According to Tareen, the party handed its final set of demands to the government.
Khan's PTI wants Sharif's ouster over alleged rigging in last year's poll which his party lost, while Qadri wants to bring a revolution in the country.
Both leaders have been agitating since mid-August 14. At least three people have been killed and over 550 injured in violence during the protests.
The government this week said it has as reached an agreement with Khan's party on most of their demands, except that of Sharif's ouster which it said is non-negotiable.