Nov21

Musharraf may quit army by Saturday

President Gen. Pervez Musharraf could quit as chief of the army and take oath as a civilian president by Saturday, a senior official said, meeting a key demand of critics at home and abroad of his imposition of emergency rule.

The Supreme Court is expected to clear the last legal obstacles to Musharraf’s continued rule on Thursday. The Election Commission can then confirm his victory in a disputed October presidential election.

Attorney General Malik Mohammed Qayyum told The Associated Press on Wednesday that Musharraf would quickly quit his army post and be sworn in for a new five-year term.

“It may happen on Saturday,” Qayyum said. “I know the president, and he will honor his commitment.”

The general has been under heavy political pressure since he suspended the constitution Nov. 3 and cracked down on dissenters who had questioned his right to stay in power.

The United States has said crucial Jan. 8 elections will be seriously compromised if the state of emergency is not lifted. The U.S. hopes that balloting will usher in a moderate government committed to fighting Islamic extremism.

At home, Musharraf risks seeing his two main rivals — former prime ministers Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif — join forces to oust him.

But having purged the Supreme Court of dissenting judges, Musharraf has reined back some of the most draconian elements of what many legal experts are describing as martial law.

Seeking to stave off diplomatic isolation, Pakistan on Wednesday asked a key international forum comprising Britain and its former colonies to delay a decision on whether to suspend it.

In a phone call with his British counterpart on Tuesday, caretaker Prime Minister Mohammedmian Soomro asked the Commonwealth for a “short postponement,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammed Sadiq said.

Soomro “expressed concern that any precipitate decision by (the Commonwealth) on Pakistan’s participation in the Commonwealth would be unfortunate” and urged them to send a delegation to Pakistan to find out more about the situation, Sadiq said.

Foreign ministers from the 53-nation organization meeting in Kampala, Uganda, were expected to take up the issue of Pakistan on Thursday.

A suspension would be an international embarrassment for Pakistan, which was last kicked out of the organization in 1999, following Musharraf’s coup. It took them five years to be reinstated.


2 Responses to “Musharraf may quit army by Saturday”

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  1. Nov22

    nazia

    Said this at 2:37pm:

    It dosnt matter whether he remains on uniform or not.He has already lost his credibility and trust on his people so change of skin would have no effect on his foxy policies.He is denying the truth that he is a looser and now changing his form would change the status of his wrong doings.He is taking public outcry as joke and his unlawful acts on daily basis are dangerously damaging the national interests.

  2. Nov26

    Imran

    Said this at 3:22am:

    The history is going to be repeated in pakistan so early “unbelieveable” like in past we still remember the golden period of pakistan although there was no 9/11 in 60’s which was been exploited in such a perfect manner then again the invasion of US in Afghanistan has also been taken care of well. The international image of Nawaz Sharif’s Pakistan or so called Pakistani Benazir’s Pakistan is considered good only when it has approval from their lord of power US.I want every Pakistani to think again we want Benazir,Nawaz Sharif or Pakistan.

 

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A prominent Pakistani journalist Mr.Khalid Minhas started this site when he was In Jeddah in 2000. The basic need for this site is to provide the latest news and information about Pakistan to the People of Pakistan and Pakistani living abroad. Another journalist Mr. Zaheer Ud Din Butt joined him to run this site.