Johnny & Jugnu: Fast food staff arrested for not giving police free burgers
14 June 2021
IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
Image caption,
The workers were not allowed to close the kitchen when they were detained, the restaurant has said
All 19 workers at a fast food restaurant in Pakistan were detained after refusing to give a group of police officers free burgers last week.
Staff at the chain Johnny & Jugnu in Lahore were rounded up at 0100 (2000 GMT) on Saturday and held overnight.
"This is not the first time something like this has happened... at our restaurant," a statement by the burger chain said.
Nine police officers involved in the incident have now been suspended.
Senior provincial police official Inam Ghani announced the suspensions on Twitter, saying: "No one is allowed to take the law into his own hands. Injustice will not be tolerated. All of them will be punished."
The restaurant also said the staff were not allowed to close down the kitchen, leaving "fryers still running, customers waiting for their orders".
The workers were detained for seven hours and said the officers were "harassing them, pushing them around, all for not giving them free burgers".
Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan has previously called for a reform of the Punjab region's police force, saying local politicians had appointed "cronies" to run police stations.
In a statement posted on Facebook, Johnny & Jugnu said a group of police officers had gone to the restaurant two days before the incident and asked for free burgers.
On 11 June, it said, "some police officers came to our... outlet and took our manager into custody, without giving any reason whatsoever. Then they emptied out our entire branch, taking all of our kitchen crew, including the rest of the managers".
14 June 2021
IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
Image caption,
The workers were not allowed to close the kitchen when they were detained, the restaurant has said
All 19 workers at a fast food restaurant in Pakistan were detained after refusing to give a group of police officers free burgers last week.
Staff at the chain Johnny & Jugnu in Lahore were rounded up at 0100 (2000 GMT) on Saturday and held overnight.
"This is not the first time something like this has happened... at our restaurant," a statement by the burger chain said.
Nine police officers involved in the incident have now been suspended.
Senior provincial police official Inam Ghani announced the suspensions on Twitter, saying: "No one is allowed to take the law into his own hands. Injustice will not be tolerated. All of them will be punished."
The restaurant also said the staff were not allowed to close down the kitchen, leaving "fryers still running, customers waiting for their orders".
The workers were detained for seven hours and said the officers were "harassing them, pushing them around, all for not giving them free burgers".
Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan has previously called for a reform of the Punjab region's police force, saying local politicians had appointed "cronies" to run police stations.
In a statement posted on Facebook, Johnny & Jugnu said a group of police officers had gone to the restaurant two days before the incident and asked for free burgers.
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On 11 June, it said, "some police officers came to our... outlet and took our manager into custody, without giving any reason whatsoever. Then they emptied out our entire branch, taking all of our kitchen crew, including the rest of the managers".