A charred lorry, empty tear gas shells and posters of former Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan – it was all that remained of a massive protest led by Khan’s wife, Bushra Bibi, that had sent the entire capital into lockdown.
Just a day earlier, faith healer Bibi – wrapped in a white shawl, her face covered by a white veil – stood atop a shipping container on the edge of the city as thousands of her husband’s devoted followers waved flags and chanted slogans beneath her.
“My children and my brothers! You have to stand with me,” she cried on Tuesday afternoon, her voice cutting through the deafening roar of the crowd.
“But even if you don’t,” she continued, “I will still stand firm.
“This is not just about my husband. It is about this country and its leader.”
It was, noted some watchers of Pakistani politics, her political debut.
But as the sun rose on Wednesday morning, there was no sign of Bushra Bibi, nor the thousands of protesters who had marched through the country to the heart of the capital, demanding the release of their jailed leader.
Exactly what happened to the so-called “final march”, and Bushra Bibi, when the city went dark is still unclear.
All eyewitnesses like Samia* can say for certain is that the lights went out suddenly, plunging D Chowk, the square where they had gathered, into blackness.
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As loud screams and clouds of tear gas blanketed the square, Samia describes holding her husband on the pavement, bloodied from agun shot to his shoulder.
“Everyone was running for their lives,” she later told BBC Urdu from a hospital in Islamabad, adding it was “like doomsday or a war”.
“His blood was on my hands and the screams were unending.”
But how did the tide turn so suddenly and decisively?
Just hours earlier, protesters finally reached D Chowk late afternoon on Tuesday. They had overcome days of tear gas shelling and a maze of barricaded roads to get to the city centre.
Many of them were supporters and workers of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), the party led by Khan.
He had called for the march from his jail cell, where he has been for more than a year on charges he says are politically motivated.
Now Bibi – his third wife, a woman who had been largely shrouded in mystery and out of public view since their unexpected wedding in 2018 – was leading the charge.
“We won’t go back until we have Khan with us,” she declared as the march reached D Chowk, deep in the heart of Islamabad’s government district.
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