Nine legislators from jailed former prime minister Imran Khan’s party were among more than 30 people remanded in custody yesterday under a new law restricting protests.It comes after thousands of supporters of Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party gathered in the capital Islamabad on Sunday for a rally that was broken up with tear gas.The party has faced a sweeping crackdown since former cricket star Khan was jailed in August last year on a series of charges that he says are politically motivated and designed to keep him from power.The MPs appeared at an anti-terrorism court in Islamabad where a judge remanded them in custody for eight days, an AFP journalist witnessed.They are accused of violating the Peaceful Assembly and Public Order Act 2024 – passed just last week – according to a charge sheet seen by AFP in court.In total 34 people, including the nine MPs, were named on the charge sheet as having been remanded in custody.PTI leader and senior lawyer Muhammad Shoaib Shaheen, who appeared in court alongside the MPs, faced a police complaint about an “attack on officials”, “armed riots” and “illegal assembly” after Sunday’s rally and was also remanded in custody.“I was picked up from my office around 7:30pm (1430 GMT),” he said at the court. “These small obstacles won’t hold us back. We are the soldiers of Imran Khan, and we stand with him.”Several members of the group were rounded up by police as they left the National Assembly building in the capital on Monday night, the PTI’s media team said.Gohar Ali Khan, PTI chairman in Imran Khan’s absence, was also taken away by police but later released, he told reporters.“These are not the offences where you should charge people with terrorism legislation,” he told the media.PTI lawmakers protested in a session of the National Assembly yesterday, calling for action against what they alleged was the illegal entry of law enforcement personnel into the premises of parliament.“Plainclothes people entered the parliament and arrested people’s representatives – this is an assault on Pakistan’s democracy,” PTI legislator Ali Muhammad said.National Assembly Speaker Ayaz Sadiq announced that he would investigate the complaints, which, if verified, could result in legal action. He ordered all detained lawmakers to be returned to parliament.Media footage showed police pushing the lawmakers into vehicles outside parliament, a scene that Omar Ayub Khan, the party’s leader of the opposition, called “despicable”.“Yesterday’s massive protest has sent shivers down the government’s spine,” Khan’s aide, Zulfikar Bukhari, said in a post on X, calling the detentions illegal.Thousands of Khan supporters turned out for Sunday’s rally, the largest in the capital since February elections when rival parties formed a coalition to keep PTI from power, despite the party winning the most seats.It was the first demonstration since the government passed the new law regulating public gatherings, which it said would allow for peaceful assembly subject to reasonable restrictions.Political, religious and civil rights groups in Pakistan frequently stage sit-ins and protests that can shut down cities for days.City authorities gave permission for the demonstration to go ahead but it continued beyond the stipulated time and authorities used tear gas to disperse crowds.Authorities had earlier warned of legal action “for violation of the permission”.Imran Khan rose to power in 2018 with the help of the military, analysts say, but was ousted in 2022 after reportedly falling out with the generals.A United Nations panel of experts found this month that his detention “had no legal basis and appears to have been intended to disqualify him from running for political office”.Several convictions against him have been overturned by the courts.Several members of the PTI’s social media and press team were rounded up last month and accused of “anti-state propaganda”.PTI leaders, in a press conference in the northwestern city of Peshawar, announced countrywide protests for Friday against the new crackdown.