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View Full Version : Musharraf allowed to seek new term keep army post



Guerrilla22
17th September 2007, 17:48
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - The Election Commission announced a rule change Monday that would apparently allow President Gen. Pervez Musharraf to seek a new, five-year term while still serving as army chief.


Opposition parties insist the U.S.-backed Musharraf is ineligible to run, but the commission said it had changed a rule so that a key article of the constitution no longer applied.

"The chief election commissioner of Pakistan has made the requisite amendment, with the approval of the president," the commission said in a statement.

The rule change drew an outraged response from opposition leader and former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto. She also accused Musharraf's allies of leading the country toward a dangerous crisis by refusing to restore democracy and share power.

Bhutto predicted the decision would enrage the same lawyers who led the campaign for the restoration of Pakistan's independent-minded top judge whom Musharraf tried to remove from office in March, sparking a pro-democracy protest movement. The Supreme Court later reinstated the judge.

"All political parties, irrespective of whether they were moderates or religious, regional or national, came together to back the lawyers and their movement and I think the same would happen again," Bhutto told The Associated Press late Sunday, when Pakistani media first reported the rule change.

She said her party may join other opposition groups in resigning from parliament. She said that for Musharraf to seek re-election in uniform would be "illegal."

Pakistan's political turmoil is deepening as Musharraf, who took power in a 1999 coup and became a key U.S. ally after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, tries to extend his rule. He wants lawmakers to vote him back in by mid-October, but faces tough legal and political obstacles.

Musharraf's term expires Nov. 15. The president is elected in a vote by all members of Pakistan's provincial and national assemblies.

Musharraf's standing has plummeted since March, and he is also struggling to contain a surge in attacks by pro-Taliban militants near the border with Afghanistan.

On Monday, militants attacked a Pakistani security post near the border with rockets and gunfire, starting a battle that left 14 militants dead and 16 soldiers missing, said army spokesman Maj. Gen. Waheed Arshad.

Officials also said the army has agreed to a cease-fire with militants holding some 260 soldiers hostage since Aug. 30 in the South Waziristan border region. The cease-fire was established by tribal leaders acting as mediators.

Last week, Musharraf sidelined his chief political rival, former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, sending him back into exile. But in doing that, he set up another showdown with the Supreme Court that had earlier ruled that Sharif could return to Pakistan.

Bhutto has been in talks with Musharraf on a pact including constitutional amendments to defuse the legal challenges to his re-election and let her return and seek a third term as premier in parliamentary elections due by January.

Negotiations have snagged over Musharraf's reluctance to cede his sweeping powers.

Monday's announcement by the election commission, however, seemed to remove the need for such a pact.

The election commission said it was updating its rules to reflect Supreme Court rulings in 2002 and 2005 that Article 63 of the constitution did not apply to Musharraf. The article includes a bar on government servants running for election that some legal experts argue prevents Musharraf from seeking another term.

The article also says that former government servants must wait for two years before they become eligible to run. Some argue that makes Musharraf ineligible even if he quits as army chief.

Information Minister Muhammad Ali Durrani said the government was not involved in the rule change. He defended the Election Commission's announcement, saying it had only amended the election rules in accordance with court rulings.

On Monday, the Supreme Court resumed hearing six petitions, including one by Jamaat-e-Islami, Pakistan's largest Islamist group, on Musharraf's eligibility to stand again. Their eventual verdict could override the decision of the Election Commission.

Attorney General Malik Mohammed Qayyum said that, with the cases pending in court, the Election Commission was "reluctant" to announce the schedule for the presidential election. Ruling party lawmakers have said it will be held in early October.

Cheung Mo
19th September 2007, 03:09
I wouldn't cry to see Musharraff assassinated, even it were by an religious lunatic.

Tatarin
19th September 2007, 04:39
Oh, but President Musharraf aren't as evil as that communist Chairman Chavez-il Sung who want to create a new Pol Pot-regime in all of South America!

guerrillagrenade
19th September 2007, 08:14
So whats the story behind Jumaat-e-Islami. I saw something about pakistan being a complete police state?? Also something about Alqada being in parts of Pakistan??

ComradeR
19th September 2007, 10:04
Originally posted by [email protected] 19, 2007 03:39 am
Oh, but President Musharraf aren't as evil as that communist Chairman Chavez-il Sung who want to create a new Pol Pot-regime in all of South America!
You see there's good dictat..i mean "Presidents" ;) you know the ones who follow the great benefactors (the imperial nations) and want only whats best for people :lol: , and then there is those damn evil commies who only want to only enslave or kill everyone!

So whats the story behind Jumaat-e-Islami. I saw something about pakistan being a complete police state??
From what I've heard Pakistan is your typical military dictatorship.

Also something about Alqada being in parts of Pakistan??
Both the Taliban and Al-Qaeda enjoy great support in the northern tribal areas where the government has very little control.

guerrillagrenade
19th September 2007, 18:58
funny thing is it read U.S-Backed.... Maybe its kinda the same deal our goverment is doing in Somalia.

Spirit of Spartacus
21st September 2007, 17:02
So whats the story behind Jumaat-e-Islami.

Long story. But they rose to their current level of prominence during the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan. The US imperialists funded the right-wing military regime of Zia-ul-Haq (in much the same way as they now fund Musharraf's military regime). And, the US also directly funded Islamists in both Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The Soviets left Afghanistan and the socialist government fell.

And Pakistan was left with an even more powerful and reactionary pro-US military, and the plague of religious fundamentalists.

Jamaat-e-Islami sided with the US during the Afghan war, but now they've turned on their former imperialist masters. They are part of the coalition of religious parties MMA (United Front for Action).

MMA controls the provincial and local governments in the North-west Frontier Province, on the border with Afghanistan.


I saw something about pakistan being a complete police state??

I don't know what you mean, but repression can be quite harsh.


Also something about Alqada being in parts of Pakistan??

Yes, in the semi-autonomous tribal areas of the north-west, on the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan.