The incident occurred in Mahni countryside area of Bhakkar district in Punjab, where Qatari royal family members were camping to hunt down rare houbara bustards.
The villagers alleged the hunters were causing severe damage to chickpeas crop and started marching towards the camps of hunters, but the police stopped them, Dawn reported.
The police asked the protesters to disperse peacefully, but they insisted that the hunters should leave instead because they were destroying the only crop produced during the entire season.
Later, local officials held negotiations with the protesters and it was decided that a delegation of protesters would meet the royal hunters to find out whether or not the problem could be solved amicably through compensation etc.
A protester said that chickpea was the only crop suitable for the sandy soil of the area.
He said that hunting of the rare bird by Arab dignitaries had been continuing in the area for over a decade.
He said that last year the Qatari hunters announced that a hospital and a school would be built in the area when a similar protest had been held against them, but no initiative had been taken so far in this regard.
District Police Officer Khalid Masood claimed the damage inflicted on the crop was not as grave as made out to be.
The local farmers had become used to getting compensation from the royal hunters by holding demonstrations against them.
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