At least 19 employees of a fast-food restaurant in Pakistan have been arrested after they refused to give free burgers to a group of law enforcement officers last week. The workers were rounded up at about 0100 (2000 GMT) on Saturday and are currently being held.

The 19 employees of a fast food restaurant in Pakistan have been arrested after they refused to give away free burgers to a group of policemen last week. The 19 employees of a fast food restaurant in the Pakistani city of Lahore were arrested after last week refusing to give a team of officials free burgers, the Guardian reports.

The nine policemen involved were suspended yesterday after an outcry from fans, senior provincial police official Inam Ghani said on Twitter. Announcing the decision, Ghani said: ‘No one will get justice for this decision.

In a strange incident, the entire staff of a fast food restaurant in Lahore, Pakistan, was arrested after they refused to provide police with free burgers. The staff member was taken into police custody on June 12 and held for seven hours after allegedly threatening officers.

Police in Pakistan have arrested the entire staff of a fast food restaurant after they refused to provide a group of officers with free burgers. Pakistani police arrested the employees of Burger King restaurant in Lahore last week after they reportedly refused to give them a free burger. Nine police officers have been suspended following the incident, in which staff were led away for more than seven hours.

The 19 employees of a fast-food restaurant in Pakistan have been arrested after refusing police to give them free hamburgers last week. Nineteen employees at Lahore branch of popular fast food chain Johnny Jugnu were taken into police custody on Saturday after staff at the popular fast food restaurant threatened police and refused to give out their menus for free, the restaurant and the police said. Staff were rounded up at 0100 (2000 GMT) on Saturday and held for a day.

Lahore (AFP) A group of police officers in Lahore overturned a takeaway joint after refusing to hand out free burgers and arrested 19 store employees. Police in Pakistan have arrested at least 19 employees of a fast food chain after they refused to hand out free burgers. Lahore (Afp) A group of police officers in Lahore overturned the takeaway joint and arrested the 19 employees.

After a fast food restaurant in Pakistan refused to give free burgers away a group of police officers became angry and arrested 19 employees of the fast food restaurant. In fact, they were so outraged by the refusal to hand out free burgers that they arrested the employees.

Johnny Jugnu’s associates were held for seven hours in Lahore on Saturday night. In a Facebook announcement, the company said a group of police officers went into the restaurant two days before the incident and asked for free burgers. Johnny Jugnu, from Lahore, was arrested at 0100 (2000 GMT) on Saturday.

Fast food chain Johnny & Jugnu said police had been harassing its employees for several days. The police officers emptied the entire branch and took the kitchen team, including the other managers, with them. They came to the restaurant and asked for free burgers two days before the incident.

Nine police officers involved in the incident have been suspended by authorities. Johnny & Jugnu Phase 6 DHA Lahore employees were arrested by police on Friday. On Saturday, 19 employees were gathered and held for seven hours after being left unattended in the kitchen by hungry guests.

Johnny Jugnu said in a Facebook group posting a statement that officers went to the restaurant two days before the incident and asked for free burgers. The statement deplored the fact that the demand for free food by the police has become a common practice among restaurant staff, but refused to do so: “In the same week, they threatened our manager to leave the restaurant and return the next day, harassed and harassed our team on the basis of baseless arguments and asked us if we would close the restaurant.

It examines the rise of pricing models that provide customers with products and services free of charge as a strategy to attract users and sell them at premium levels. These stories are just some of my experiences in Africa, the Middle East, and Europe, which remind me that, while the police in the US are not perfect, they are a country that stands head and shoulders above many countries.

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By WBN