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DIFFICULT
TIMES AHEAD FOR MUSHARRAF
By Muhammad Najeeb, Islamabad, 10 September 2007 (IANS)
Difficult
times lie ahead for President Pervez Musharraf, who is seeking another
presidential term but is facing a strong challenge from a majority
of the opposition parties led by former prime minister Nawaz Sharif's
Pakistan Muslim League (PML-N). Nawaz Sharif was again sent into
forced exile to Saudi Arabia on Monday only four hours after he
landed in Pakistan from seven years in exile in the Saudi kingdom
and in London.
A debate
has already begun among the intelligentsia, lawyers and the media
about the manner of Sharif's deportation and whether it violates
Supreme Court orders that the former prime minister be allowed to
return. The entire opposition, except for former prime minister
Benazir Bhutto's Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), has condemned the
government move and has backed a protest called by PML-N on Tuesday.
"We
stand by this call and would participate in the strike," said
Mutahidda Majlis-e-Amal (MMA) leader Qazi Hussain Ahmed, who was
arrested on Sunday evening after he announced he would go to the
airport to welcome Sharif. "Sharif's return and deportation
is a major blow to the president. It would weaken his position in
the coming elections," the editor of an Urdu daily said.
He
claimed that many parliamentarians of the ruling Pakistan Muslim
League-Quaid (PML-Q) were ready to join the Nawaz faction of the
League. Almost 80 percent of the PML-Q parliamentarians are former
members of PML-N and many of them have already started distancing
themselves from what is often referred to as the "King's Party".
Some
of them have also been saying that they would not vote for Musharraf
in the coming presidential election due between Sept 15-Oct 15.
The schedule of election is expected sometime next week.
Musharraf
in an attempt to legitimise another term in office, is also talking
to Bhutto on a power-sharing deal. However, the president's popularity
has slumped since he dismissed Chief Justice Ifthikar Mohammad Chaudhury
in March. Chaudhury fought back and the Supreme Court reinstated
him after a four-month legal battle. The people are also highly
critical of the government for allowing interference in the country's
affairs by foreign powers.
"It
is strange that the government has involved Saudi Arabia and other
countries in stopping Nawaz Sharif," said disgruntled PPP leader
Ghulam Mustafa Khar, who travelled with Sharif from London. According
to Khar, Sharif's differences with Bhutto started after she chose
to talk to Musharraf.
The
media has also been highly critical of the foreign interventions,
with GEO TV airing the people's views. This is for the first time
that people in Pakistan have started speaking against the Saudi
rulers, who are otherwise well respected in the country.
"Saudi
monarchs, Lebanese leader Saad Hariri or any other Arab dictator
should not interfere in the democratic process in Pakistan,"
said unnamed man on GEO TV. Another said the foreign countries must
respect the Pakistani Supreme Court and the wishes of Pakistanis
who want a democratic government in the country.
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