IMRAN
KHAN DETAINED WHILE BUSH VISITS PAKISTAN
(March 6, 2006)
Islamabad,
Pakistan: US President George W Bush on Saturday thanked Pakistan's
military ruler President Pervez Musharraf for his "bold decision"
to join the war on terror but said more work was needed to defeat
Al-Qaeda. Bush, on the final leg of a South Asian tour that has
also taken in India and Afghanistan, reaffirmed the strategic relationship
between Washington and Islamabad forged after September 11, 2001
attacks on the United States.
General
Musharraf said Pakistan and the US had further strengthened their
ties but expressed regret at a suicide attack that killed a US diplomat
a day before Bush's arrival, saying it was timed "very viciously.
President Musharraf made a bold decision after September 11 when
Pakistan chose to fight terror," Bush told a joint press conference
after hour-long talks with Musharraf.
The
Pakistani leader has survived three assassination attempts since
he abandoned Islamabad's support for Afghanistan's Taliban regime
and backed the US-led military operation to topple the fundamentalists.
Asked about Indian and Afghan concerns that Pakistan has not done
enough to crack down on extremists, Bush replied: "There is
a lot of work to be done in defeating Al-Qaeda. We must locate them
and be prepared to bring them to justice."
Pakistani
police detained opposition leaders including former cricketer Imran
Khan to prevent planned protests, while tensions remained high after
the suicide car bombing outside the US consulate in Karachi on Thursday.
Unprecedented security turned Islamabad into a ghost town for the
first visit to Pakistan by Bush, who arrived with his wife Laura
and US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on Friday. Pakistani
officials described the talks at the presidential compound in Islamabad
as "fruitful.
Bush
earlier inspected an honour guard of Pakistani soldiers, while the
First Lady met Musharraf's wife Sehba and Prime Minister Shaukat
Aziz's wife Rukshana, the official added. Two US Black Hawk helicopters
circled low over central Islamabad throughout the visit, anti-aircraft
guns were positioned on nearby hillsides and thousands of police
lined the streets.
Bush
spent the night at the heavily fortified US embassy and will spend
the whole day in Islamabad, also meeting businessmen and attending
a banquet -- which opposition legislators have vowed to boycott.
Bush, an avid baseball fan, was expected to meet Pakistani cricket
captain Inzamam-ul Haq, vice captain Younis Khan and opener Salman
Butt as well as child players from this cricket-crazy country. Bushs
maiden trip to Pakistan despite the security risks is being seen
as a show of solidarity for Musharraf, whose alliance with Washington
has angered Islamists at home.
Pakistan
has around 70,000 troops along the rugged frontier with Afghanistan,
where Osama bin Laden and other militant are thought to be hiding,
and has caught several key Al-Qaeda militants. Opposition Islamic
groups led a national strike and protests against cartoons of the
Prophet Mohammed on Friday, which turned into anti-Bush rallies,
and called for Pakistanis to observe a "black day" on
Saturday.A spokesman for Imran Khan's small Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf
or Movement for Justice party, told AFP that the ex-cricket captain
was under house arrest to stop him leading a protest in Rawalpindi
near Islamabad.
Police
also detained a lawmaker from Pakistan's main alliance of religious
parties who planned to head the rally instead, and dozens of other
activists. For Pakistan the visit is a chance to consolidate its
relationship with Washington, after Bush hailed a new strategic
partnership with Islamabad's traditional rival New Delhi. Bush clinched
a landmark nuclear energy deal with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh, and Pakistan says it wants a "similar" arrangement
despite a proliferation scandal involving its disgraced top nuclear
scientist, Abdul Qadeer Khan. Musharraf is expected to ask Bush
to push India on the nearly six-decade-old feud over the Himalayan
region of Kashmir, trigger of two of their three wars. India and
Pakistan began a peace process in 2004.Officials said Pakistan and
the united States were also working on finalizing a bilateral investment
treaty, seen as a first step to a Free Trade Agreement.
Release
Source: www.c2b2bnews.com
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