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Musharraf names Pakistan army successor
AP on Yahoo ^ | 10/2/07 | Zarar Khan - ap

Posted on 10/02/2007 8:41:58 AM PDT by NormsRevenge

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - President Gen. Pervez Musharraf pushed ahead Tuesday with plans for an expected re-election victory, naming a trusted ally to lead the military in his place and agreeing to amnesty for a former prime minister who could become a key ally against terrorism.

Musharraf has enraged opponents by simultaneously serving as head of the army and president, and has promised to doff his uniform if he wins Saturday's vote by national and provincial lawmakers. A bloc of opposition lawmakers resigned from parliament on Tuesday, hoping their departure would rob the election of legitimacy.

Musharraf will grant former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and others amnesty as early as Wednesday in corruption cases up to 1999 in which politicians had not been convicted, said Deputy Information Minister Tariq Azim. The amnesty was one of Bhutto's key demands during power-sharing negotiations, which Azim said had resumed Tuesday.

Bhutto plans to return to Pakistan from London on Oct. 18, eight years after she went into self-imposed exile to escape prosecution.

Azim said the amnesty was aimed at easing political acrimony ahead of parliamentary elections due by January. He indicated that it would also apply to former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, whose government was ousted in the 1999 coup that brought Musharraf to power.

"I think in that spirit of national reconciliation we have to go through this," Azim said.

Bhutto has been charged in Pakistan with illegally amassing properties and bank accounts overseas while in power. She was also convicted of money laundering in Switzerland in July 2003 and ordered to pay $11 million to the Pakistani government. The conviction was automatically thrown out when she contested it, but the case is still under investigation.

Ruling party officials have urged Bhutto's party not to join other opposition parties in boycotting Saturday's ballot, though Musharraf's allies insist they have enough votes to win in any case.

"We have to hold the presidential election to meet a constitutional requirement and we will do it," Information Minister Mohammed Ali Durrani said.

Maulana Fazal-ur Rahman, leader of the opposition in parliament, said Musharraf might win but would lack legitimacy. Musharraf, who seized power in a 1999 coup, has faced growing opposition since March when he made a botched attempt to oust the country's chief justice.

"After our resignation, Musharraf's success would have no value," Rahman said.

Gen. Ashfaq Kiani, a former intelligence chief, will become vice chief of the army on Monday and will take the powerful top job when Musharraf vacates it, a military statement said.

Lawyers for Musharraf's two main rivals in Saturday's vote — retired judge Wajihuddin Ahmed and Makhdoom Amin Fahim, vice chairman of the Bhutto's party — filed two petitions with the Supreme Court on Tuesday.

Both argue that Musharraf is ineligible to run because he has retained his role as army chief and that the Election Commission was wrong to approve his nomination papers Saturday.

The court dismissed several similar challenges Friday, but lawyers hoped it would act after the commission changed an election rule in Musharraf's favor.

"We have a strong case against Pervez Musharraf," lawyer Tariq Mahmood told reporters.

The opposition also insists Musharraf should not seek re-election by the current assemblies, but should wait until after new legislative elections.

Opposition leaders submitted the resignations of all 85 of their lawmakers in the 342-seat National Assembly. Two ruling party legislators also quit over their differences with their party's policies.

"Our lawmakers are making this sacrifice in the larger interest of Pakistan. It is a decisive moment," said Javed Hashmi, acting leader of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's Pakistan Muslim League-N party.

Under the constitution, the president is elected by the National Assembly, the Senate and the four provincial legislatures. The opposition submitted mass resignations Monday in three of the provincial assemblies and planned to do so later in the fourth.

Both Musharraf, a close U.S. ally, and Bhutto have called for moderates to unite against extremism. Bhutto said Monday she would cooperate with the American military in targeting Osama bin Laden.

Bhutto told BBC America that she would accept U.S. assistance if Washington discovered the whereabouts of the al-Qaida leader, but that she would prefer to have the Pakistani military execute the strike.

Authorities have resorted to authoritarian methods to contain the opposition, including using tear gas and batons Saturday on lawyers protesting against Musharraf. On Monday, Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry ordered three officials suspended over the crackdown that injured dozens, including journalists covering the demonstration.

___

Associated Press writer Munir Ahmad contributed to this report.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: musharraf; pakistan; successor

In this picture taken on Aug. 2, 2007 and released by Inter Services Public Relations President Gen. Pervez Musharraf, front, and newly appointed Vice Chief of Pakistan Army Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, left back, attend a ceremony at National Command Authority (NCA) in Islamabad, Pakistan. A former Pakistani intelligence chief Kiayani has been named to replace Musharraf as head of the army after Saturday's presidential election, state television reported Tuesday, Oct. 2, 2007. (AP Photo/Inter Services Public Relations/HO)


1 posted on 10/02/2007 8:42:00 AM PDT by NormsRevenge
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To: NormsRevenge
From The Telegraph (UK)

Pervez Musharraf wins Pakistan election

By Martina Smit and agencies
Last Updated: 4:30pm BST 06/10/2007

General Pervez Musharraf won a landslide victory in Pakistan's controversial presidential election, but the Supreme Court may yet snatch another five-year term away from him.

The military ruler, who came to power in a coup in 1999, crushed two token rivals in a vote by national and provincial parliaments that was mostly boycotted by the opposition.

Gen Musharraf must now await the decision of the supreme court until at least Oct 17, when it is due to announce whether he was legally able to run for office while still army chief.

"Rejoice in victory," Shaukat Aziz, the prime minister, told supporters of Gen Musharraf's ruling Pakistan Muslim League as they banged drums and waved flags outside the party headquarters in Islamabad.

But outside the provincial assembly in Peshawar, police this morning fired tear gas into a crowd of about 500 lawyers who tried to storm the building while voting was underway.

The demonstrators burned an effigy of Gen Musharraf, set fire to an armoured police car and threw stones at the parliament building, witnesses said.

Police in Karachi, Pakistan's biggest city, also reported "incidents of protesters pelting vehicles with stones and setting of bonfires".

The chief election commissioner, Qazi Mohammad Farooq, said a total of 257 votes were cast in the national assembly and senate, out of which Musharraf won 252 and three were rejected.

One rival, the former judge Wajihdduin Ahmad, won two votes, he said. Another, Makhdoom Amin Fahim, the vice-chairman of the former premier Benazir Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party (PPP), got none.

Gen Musharraf's total electoral college vote including the provincial assemblies was 384 ballots out of 702, government officials said on condition of anonymity.

Opposition parties who make up nearly 30 per cent of the college had resigned prior to the polls, while Ms Bhutto's MPs abstained after she sealed a reconciliation deal with Musharraf yesterday.

He signed an amnesty quashing corruption charges against the exiled former prime minister, and other politicians, to gain the cooperation of the PPP, the largest party in the country.

"It's a sham election," said Siddiqul Farooq from the opposition All Parties Democracy Movement, whose MPs last week resigned from parliament in protest against Gen Musharraf's candidacy.

The government, however, insisted his victory was valid. "It is a clear-cut victory, legally, constitutionally, morally and politically," said Sheikh Rashid, the railways minister and one of Gen Musharraf's closest advisers.

America, to whom Gen Musharraf has been a key ally in its war against terror, gave a cautious response to the result.

"We are waiting for a declaration from the Pakistan supreme court. We will not have a comment until that declaration is made," a State Department spokeswoman said.

2 posted on 10/06/2007 3:55:52 PM PDT by blam (Secure the border and enforce the law)
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