Islamabad decided to attack Kabul under the pretext of eliminating TTP and its leaders who speak for rights in KPK. However, soon after, the so-called “Land of the Pure” turned into the Land of Panic. On the eve of Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan’s (TLP) “Labbaik Ya Aqsa Million March,” the Pakistani government hit the panic button.
NaPak did what it does best — pulled the plug on the internet, sealed Islamabad’s roads with shipping containers, and declared a state of emergency across Punjab.
The so-called “mighty” Pakistani Army is scared silly and is hiding behind barricades of its own making. The Interior Ministry, under Mohsin Naqvi, suspended mobile and internet services across Islamabad and Rawalpindi and imposed Section 144. They banned gatherings of more than four people. Yes, the same country that lectures the world on “freedom in Kashmir” can’t handle a few thousand protesters in its capital without switching off the internet and calling the army. And to distract from its lack of control – its Aaand force attacked Kabul!
But the real irony? These protesters aren’t liberal activists or democracy advocates. They’re TLP’s radical Islamists, the same mob the military once fed, funded, and used to unleash chaos against India, France, and even their own civilian governments.
Now, those very “assets” have turned against their masters.
The Monster Islamabad Created: When TLP Became the New Taliban
Founded in 2015, Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan was initially a clerical fringe. It’s street force that rallied behind blasphemy laws and idolized Mumtaz Qadri, the assassin of Governor Salman Taseer. But under the indulgence of Pakistan’s Army and Deep State, it grew into a Frankenstein.
The ISI once saw TLP as “useful street muscle” — an Islamist mob that could distract public anger, threaten sitting governments, and keep the West guessing about Pakistan’s stability.
That strategy has now exploded in their faces.
In Lahore, dozens were injured as police raided TLP headquarters to arrest its chief, Saad Hussain Rizvi, before the march. What followed was sheer chaos! Clashes, stone pelting, roadblocks, and violent mobs chanting “Labbaik Ya Rasool Allah!” For a nation that exported jihad, it’s poetic justice – the jihad has finally come home.
And it’s not limited to Lahore. Pakistan’s entire geography is rebelling – Khyber Pakhtunkhwa burns under Pashtun protests, Balochistan bleeds with daily explosions, PoJK demands freedom from Islamabad. Moreover, even Punjabi Pakistan, the army’s heartland, is choking under the weight of its own monsters.
Cracks in the Fake “Republic”
Pakistan’s generals still pretend to run a democracy — but the mask is slipping. The “elected” government under Shehbaz Sharif (installed after Imran Khan’s ouster) survives only by martial law in disguise. They even openly admit this fact. Elections are rigged, the press is gagged, and dissent is criminalized.
Yet, despite all this control, the Napak state has lost the street.
Every province is now a battlefield:
- In Balochistan, separatists are attacking army convoys weekly, Jaffar Express and other trains explode on tracks, highways are under the control of Baloch freedom fighters, and state control over many regions is non-existent.
- In Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pashtun militias openly defy state authority.
- In PoJK, locals chant slogans for merger with India and independence from the NaPak Army.
- In Pakistan’s Punjab, once the obedient child of Rawalpindi, mobs are now fighting police in broad daylight.
Even Pakistan’s favorite excuse – “foreign hand” – sounds hollow now. You can’t blame India for people rioting in Lahore. You can’t accuse Israel of power cuts in Islamabad. The only “foreign hand” strangling Pakistan is the army’s own iron fist.
Pakistan – A Nation Eating Itself
Pakistan today looks less like a state and more like a ticking time bomb. When you feed extremism, silence moderates, crush minorities, and sell fake nationalism for decades, the result is inevitable – chaos.
The very mobs that shouted “Death to France!” are now shouting “Death to the Pakistani Army!”
The same clerics once paraded by ISI to burn Indian flags are now burning Pakistani police vans. For years, Rawalpindi believed it could control religion, manipulate terror, and run a country on borrowed IMF money. Now, all three have collapsed at once.
As internet shutdowns, section 144s, and barricades become the new national symbol, the question remains — is Pakistan still a functioning country, or just a security camp pretending to be one?
Islamabad’s generals wanted absolute control – They got it.
Now, they’re watching their own creations of TLP, TTP, and others burn Atankistan — province by province, slogan by slogan.


