He launched his campaign in August, saying he wanted revolutionary change in how Pakistan was run.拉菲紅酒 Another opposition leader, former cricketer Imran Khan, said his supporters would keep protesting in the capital until Mr Sharif stepped down. Mr Qadri has provided the bulk of the crowds in Islamabad but numbers have been thinning since September. Imran Khan has already expanded his protest by holding huge anti-government rallies in Karachi and other major cities of Punjab province. Struggling to sustain his sit-in, it seems Mr Qadri had little choice but to follow suit, the BBC's Shahzeb Jillani reports. line At the scene: M Ilyas Khan, BBC News, Islamabad葡萄酒 They are packing up and leaving Constitution Avenue, but many feel it will take them a day or two to clear out. There are more than 1,500 tents to be folded and shipped back to the Lahore city offices of Tahirul Qadri's Minhaj Welfare Foundation, and hundreds of rented chairs to be returned. Police numbers have thinned as the crowds have dwindled - now dozens of workers are getting ready to clear the tonnes of rubbish that have accumulated in central Islamabad over the past 70 days. A huge crane is loading shipping containers - used to block roads - back on to waiting trucks. Most protesters say Mr Qadri's announcement to end the sit-in came as a surprise, and many were disappointed, not just because they were going back without toppling the government, but also because the revolution they believed was in the air has receded. In the longer term, although the sit-in could not oust Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, many feel it did dent the image that his government had as a popular one in control of its affairs.女士脫髮