A year after leading major street protests aimed at toppling the Pakistani government, populist preacher Tahir-ul-Qadri says he has turned back to religion, but remains prepared to re-launch his "revolution" when the time is right.
Weeks of sit-in protests by supporters of Qadri and opposition politician Imran Khan reached a climax in early September 2014 as protesters clashed with police and stormed the state broadcaster.
For a few hours it looked as if Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's government might fall, but the crisis abated and eventually the protesters went home.
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The protests fizzled out and Qadri left Pakistan for medical treatment. Earlier this year he quietly returned, this time to lead not rumbustious street protests but a 10-day prayer vigil during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan.
Thousands of his followers of all ages gathered in two vast compounds in the eastern city of Lahore to pray, fast, sleep and eat together.
The 64-year-old began leading the annual vigil in Lahore three decades ago and it formed the basis of his Pakistan Awami Tehreek (PAT) political movement, founded in 1989.
He describes the event as "an exercise to discipline the followers for a revolution to run the country in the lines of the system introduced by the holy Prophet Mohammed 14 centuries ago".
But when AFP interviewed him at the event in Lahore, Qadri refused to answer questions about his 2013 and 2014 protests and what the future might hold for him politically.
When the protests were going on, some -- including members of Sharif's ruling PML-N party -- accused him of being a puppet, working on behalf of the powerful military to try to destabilise the elected civilian government in a bid to increase the generals' influence.
Qadri would not address the allegation directly but condemned his critics in general terms.
"There have always been opponents. There were opponents of the prophets. The opponents always propagate negatively and I can't come to their level to answer their propaganda," he told AFP.