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Islamabad in chaos, martial law imminent

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The situation has just gone from bad to worse.

As I post this right now the Geo News station is being stormed by the police to stop the broadcast. They were broadcasting people pelting stones onto the police... They are now being fired upon with tear gas. The reporters had barricaded themselves in and were refusing to leave the news room.

Hamid Mir, speaking on phone to Geo TV in Karachi was giving minute by minute report of the police is attack. He himself got into a fight with them. Then suddenly the Geo TV newscaster told Hamid Mir to save himself and get everyone out of harms way.

The government has just fallen from grace, IMHO. I know what Mushy would do. He's going to sack Shaukat Aziz and pin everything on him. Since this chief justice issue started with Shaukat Aziz and his issues. There is Chaos in the nations capital. Back home in Lahore, laborers have started to not show up.

IMO Martial law is imminent... No other way to restore calm. Shaukat Aziz would go if not Musharraf and that would mean even bigger chaos, so martial law should be imposed for 2-3 days and let things chill out before we are left without an identifiable leader.
 
Tear gas against Pakistan lawyers



Democracy questions
Lawyers' viewpoints
Pakistani police have used tear gas near the Supreme Court in Islamabad to disperse protesters angered at the suspension of the court's top judge.
Hundreds of lawyers have rallied in defiance of security restrictions.

Earlier many opposition activists were arrested hours before Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry was due to appear before a judicial tribunal.

He denies charges of misconduct. His supporters say the government is trying to silence him.

Later on Friday police moved in to the offices of the private Geo TV station and smashed furniture, windows and equipment. Geo has been defying government warnings over covering the protests.

Rallying point

Mr Chaudhry has a reputation for independence and has challenged the government on several cases.

He is making his second appearance before the tribunal at the Supreme Court on Friday.


Qazi Hussain Ahmed was arrested outside the court

The BBC's Barbara Plett in Islamabad says that the chief justice made a triumphal entry into the supreme court.

Supporters surrounded his vehicle, and some rode on top of it through the gate.

They chanted slogans like "justice lead, we will follow". Many of the slogans were also aimed against President Pervez Musharraf who suspended the top judge last week.

General Musharraf has accused protestors of politicising the issue and says he will abide by the decision of the judicial council.

Our correspondent says that Mr Chaudhry's suspension seems to have become a rallying point for all those with grievances against the government of President Pervez Musharraf.

On Thursday, police arrested hundreds of opposition politicians and supporters in a bid to quell further violence.


Paramilitary police prepare for confrontation

But the arrests did not stop several hundred lawyers from marching to the Supreme Court on Friday despite a massive police presence in Islamabad. They were supported by high-profile opposition figures.

Security forces blocked traffic and rolled barbed wire across roads leading up to the courthouse.

Clashes broke out and police detained a number of protesters. They include Qazi Hussain Ahmed, the leader of the hard-line Islamic coalition, the MMA, who was taken away in a police vehicle.

Media restrictions

Also arrested was Hafiz Hussain Ahmed, another senior Islamic politician, who was detained by police along with several supporters near the Supreme Court building.

The media is facing further restrictions on its reporting. The broadcasting authority, Pemra, has banned the Geo TV station Geo from showing one of its current affairs programmes.

Both Geo and another network, Aaj, have had their broadcasts suspended in recent days due to their coverage of the protests.


The security forces were unable to stop the protests turning violent

Mr Chaudhry was suspended one week ago by President Musharraf after he had received "numerous complaints and serious allegations for misconduct, misuse of authority and actions prejudicial to the dignity of office of the chief justice of Pakistan", the state-run Associated Press of Pakistan news agency said.

Details of the charges have not been made public.

Lawyers say the judge's suspension is an assault on judicial independence.

They have been on strike all week over the issue in protest against the suspension.

The chief justice himself has vowed to fight his case, both to clear his name and to defend the independence of the judiciary.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6457019.stm
 
Judge row prompts Pakistan democracy questions
M Ilyas Khan
BBC News, Karachi



The role of Pakistan's judiciary is in the spotlight
Pakistani President General Pervez Musharraf's suspension of Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry has opened a new debate on democracy, constitutionalism and the role of military in the country.

The TV images of a president in military uniform chastising the country's top judge have had people in shock for the past four days.

Meanwhile, a storm of protests has erupted all over the country, with the legal community boycotting the courts and opposition parties gearing up for a political conference to debate the issue.

Members of the government insist the action is rooted in the constitution, but critics say the sequence of events shows that that may not be the case.

Military justice

On Friday, General Musharraf called the chief justice to Army House, his official residence in Rawalpindi, and asked him to explain his position on a list of charges brought against him from several quarters.

Finding his answers unsatisfactory, the official APP news agency reported, the president referred the allegations to the country's Supreme Judicial Council (SJC), a five-member body of senior judges empowered to probe the conduct of their peers.

At the same time, he issued two orders; one restraining the chief justice from performing his functions and the other ordering the appointment of an acting chief justice.


Mr Chaudhry (right) irked the president

Legal experts doubt the legality of both these orders.

They say under the constitution the president can send a reference to the Supreme Judicial Council against a judge, but has no powers to restrain him.

"It is the prerogative of the SJC," says a former chief justice, Justice Saeeduzzaman Siddiqui. "Usually, the judge himself opts out for the duration of the probe, and the court stops including him in the duty roster until the SJC has made its report."

But the controversy does not end here.

Harsh treatment

The chief justice "remained" at Army House for five hours, leading many to conclude that he was being detained.

Afterwards, his desire to go to the Supreme Court was overruled by the police escort that took him to his official residence in the Judges Colony in Islamabad.

He remained incommunicado for well over 48 hours, until a former politician, saying he "dodged" the security to enter his residence, met him briefly on Sunday.

The politician, Air Marshall (retired) Asghar Khan, told the press that the chief justice's telephone lines had been disconnected, his mobile phone blocked and the delivery of his newspapers stopped.

Other reports on Sunday said the national flag and the flag of the Supreme Court of Pakistan had been removed from his residence.


General Musharraf's decision has been highly unpopular

What did the chief justice do to warrant such harsh treatment when, according to the constitution, he is still the head of the judiciary in Pakistan?

Government officials say that several people have filed complaints with the president accusing the chief justice of misusing his office and receiving favours.

But critics say corruption is not an issue with the present government.

They point out that there are more serious charges - such as financial embezzlement and property fraud - against some judges, including two members of the Supreme Judicial Council which will hear the chief justice's case.

They also point to the federal cabinet, many of whose members had corruption cases pending against them in the National Accountability Bureau until they decided to join the government.

The chief justice was singled out because of his past performance, they say, which created misgivings in official circles about his likely role in the coming legal battles ahead of national elections, due later this year.

Government embarrassed

Since June 2005, when he took office for an eight-year term, the chief justice worked overtime to cut the backlog of cases at the Supreme Court.

He also took forceful action in cases relating to human rights, women and the environment, often coming down hard on senior police and civil officials to enforce the relevant laws.

But two cases stand out as evidence that the chief justice was not reluctant to take the legal battle to the very corridors of power in Islamabad.

In June 2006, he reversed the sale of state-owned Pakistan Steel Mills, citing legal violations in the process of sale by the concerned institutions including the Cabinet Committee on Privatisation, headed by Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz.


The chief justice is being guarded by a heavy police presence

More recently, he embarrassed the government by pressuring the intelligence agencies to disclose the whereabouts of scores of missing persons who they denied having detained.

Observers say with 2007 being an election year, the government is under pressure to retain its position in parliament and facilitate the re-election of General Musharraf for another term.

To avoid any risk, the government has already indicated it may let the present parliament elect General Musharraf and hold the elections later.

This is inevitably going to lead to legal disputes between the government and the opposition.

General Musharraf also requires legal sanction to continue to double as the army chief following his re-election as president.

But the chief justice's views on the issue were not what the government would have liked.

Iftikhar Chaudhry told trainee military officers in February that, in his opinion, General Musharraf could not continue as army chief beyond his present term as president.

Observers say there can be no better reason for his suspension last Friday than these remarks.


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6442829.stm
 
Pakistan's 'isolated' president

By Ahmed Rashid, Lahore




The president is coming under increasing pressure

Guest journalist and writer Ahmed Rashid reflects on the difficulties facing Pakistan's leader.

To many Pakistanis it seems that President Pervez Musharraf is becoming increasingly isolated.

The latest headache comes in the shape of lawyers who have been staging rallies across the country in protest of what they see as his politically-motivated suspension of the chief justice of the Supreme Court.

The sight of black-jacketed lawyers smattered in blood after clashes in Lahore with police does little for the image of Pakistan.

But before this, there have been signs of Islamic extremism gaining strength. Ordinary citizens are complaining of worsening law and order.

And Pakistan's relations with the United States, Europe and neighbouring countries are becoming more strained.

Kalashnikov-wielding women

This is an election year for President Musharraf. But two issues are threatening him.


Pakistan is now the most fenced in nation in the world



Send your views


The first is the military's failure to assert the government's writ over large areas of the country and its refusal to tackle Islamic extremists head-on.


The second development is the assertion of some extremists that they no longer recognise the legitimacy of the state and will only do so when an Islamic revolution takes place.

Judges, soldiers, policemen, lawyers and ordinary women and children were the victims of a dozen suicide bombings by extremists in February. The authorities have made few arrests.

In Islamabad, foreign diplomats were shocked when the government gave in to some 3,000 Kalashnikov-wielding militant women, who refused to evacuate a religious school that had been set for demolition because it had been built illegally.

In the heart of the nation's capital the women refused to recognise any orders from the state.

The cabinet was divided with some ministers, including the pro-Islamist right-wing Minister of Religious Affairs Ijaz ul Haq openly siding with the militant women.

Meanwhile extremists are threatening female politicians.

Law and order is breaking down in the major cities.

Up to 200 crimes and robberies are being committed every a day in major cities - in Karachi the figures are double that.

Much of the prevalent crime is committed by unemployed youth, who form gangs to steal cars, motor bikes and mobile phones.


Public criticism






Another blow to Pakistan's self-image came when most of the planes of the state-owned Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) were banned from landing in European Union capitals because of safety concerns. PIA officials and government ministers denied there was any problem.


Hardline Islamic opposition to the president is growing

On the international front, Gen Musharraf's credibility is at stake as his commitment to deal with terrorism is being questioned by the US and leading Nato countries.

On a five-hour visit to Islamabad on 26 February, US Vice President Dick Cheney warned the president about Pakistan's lack of action against Taleban and al-Qaeda leaders operating from its soil.

In several packed hearings in the US Congress, retired US military officers and other American experts testified that Pakistan was deliberately harbouring the Taleban to use as a political card in Afghanistan.

Nato countries not normally known for their public criticism of allies have been openly questioning Pakistan's continued commitment to the "war on terrorism".

Meanwhile, Iran has become the latest country, after India and Afghanistan, to accuse it of interference in its internal affairs.

In early March, Iranian leaders accused Pakistan of becoming a sanctuary for terrorists, after several Iranians were killed by militants who then fled across the border to Pakistan.

Iran is also suspicious that Pakistan is supporting the US agenda of trying to create a Sunni alliance of Arab countries aimed at Shia Iran. Pakistan counters that Iran is helping the insurgency by rebels in Pakistani Balochistan.



The military has failed to assert the government's writ
Pakistan is now the most fenced in nation in the world. Iran is now following India's example and erecting a fence on its border with Pakistan, while Islamabad wants to erect a fence on its border with Afghanistan.

All these problems come ahead of polls in which Gen Musharraf wants to be re-elected for another five years by the current parliament, while continuing to remain army chief.

Expectations of a free and fair elections are lowered daily as Gen Musharraf insists in public statements that people vote for his nominees, while newspapers report that the ubiquitous intelligence services are already interviewing prospective parliamentary candidates to ascertain their loyalty to the president.

Pakistanis are used to military rulers prolonging their innings indefinitely and also to rigged elections.

But what they are not used to is the growing rise of extremism around the country from the rugged mountains of Waziristan to the pristine avenues of Islamabad.

For a country armed with nuclear weapons, ordinary people are getting scared of the future.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6445135.stm
 
the latest from CNN

Tear gas used on Pakistan lawyers
POSTED: 9:11 a.m. EDT, March 16, 2007
Story Highlights• Musharraf suspended chief justice last week, placed him under house arrest
• The move has triggered protests by lawyers in several cities
• Opposition politicians arrested and media blackouts ahead of court case
• Chaudhry has been asserting judicial independence in recent cases
From CNN's Syed Mohsin Naqvi
Adjust font size:
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (CNN) -- Pakistani police used rubber bullets and tear gas to subdue a crowd gathered at the Supreme Court house in Islamabad shortly after the country's top judge arrived for a controversial court hearing, police and witnesses told CNN.

In anticipation of Pakistan's Supreme Court Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry arrival, the government arrested opposition politicians and attempted to restrict media coverage, authorities said.

The crackdown came as Chaudhry was to hear the government's charges against him.

Last week Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf suspended Chaudhry, accusing him of misusing his powers.

Chaudhry was subsequently placed under house arrest -- outraging many Pakistanis, as well as attorney, who staged protests throughout the country.

Chaudhry was appointed to the court by Musharraf in 2005, but recently started asserting judicial independence from the government in a number of cases involving the disappearance of terror suspects and human rights activists.

CNN's Syed Mohsin Naqvi in Lahore said Pakistan's media regulatory authority issued written and verbal warnings to local media outlets demanding that journalists not report on Friday's judicial proceedings.

Police also sealed off the city's main entrance points and restricted access to parliament.

In the days leading up the to hearing, police sources also told CNN the government made approximately 400 arrests.

Early Friday morning, police raided the houses of numerous members of parliament, arresting about 20 members and placing key opposition leader Qazi Hussain Ahmad under house arrest.

Former Pakistani President Muhammad Rafiq Tarar was also arrested.

In addition, police picked up 40 lawyers traveling to the capital.

On Thursday, the government pulled the plug on a leading prime-time television program because of what it deemed to be negative coverage of Musharraf's fight with Chaudhry, senior government sources said.

Kamran Khan, who hosts a show on the Geo TV network, told CNN that he had been banned from doing his show as of Thursday. Sources told CNN that other shows are likely to be banned as well.

Musharraf's critics accuse him of intimidating the judiciary ahead of crucial elections and a vote in parliament to extend his rule later this year.

Musharraf seized power in a military coup more than seven years ago, but under Pakistan's constitution, he has to surrender his position as army chief unless he gets the backing of the Supreme Court, headed by Chaudhry.

Musharraf is believed to want to remain in military uniform to bolster his standing in the country, but his popularity is waning because of his support for the U.S. war on terror.

He has also been criticized by some U.S. lawmakers and Afghanistan's President Hamid Karzai for not doing enough to crack down on Taliban and al Qaeda remnants in the mountainous tribal areas of western Pakistan.

Karzai blames Musharraf for allowing the militants to cross the border and wage attacks in Afghanistan.

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http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/asiapcf/03/16/pakistan.justice/index.html?section=cnn_latest
 
Musharraf suspended chief justice last week, placed him under house arrest
• The move has triggered protests by lawyers in several cities
• Opposition politicians arrested and media blackouts ahead of court case
• Chaudhry has been asserting judicial independence in recent cases

from CNN
 
the latest on this from yahoo

Protesters, police clash in Pakistan by Rana Jawad and Nasir Jaffry
1 hour, 38 minutes ago



ISLAMABAD (AFP) - Pakistan riot police fired rubber bullets at protesters Friday and arrested dozens of people as they tried to contain an angry protest over the sacking of the nation's top judge.

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Hundreds of demonstrators hurled rocks and bottles at paramilitary troops and police outside the Supreme Court, where Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry was due to attend a hearing into misconduct charges.

Violent clashes also broke out in the eastern city of Lahore despite overnight raids by police across the country that seized lawyers, opposition party activists and Muslim hardliners.

Military ruler President Pervez Musharraf drew international condemnation when he sacked Chaudhry last week, a move that also set off days of rallies and intensified Islamist and secular opposition anger over his leadership.

The opposition says Musharraf is trying to intimidate the judiciary before they hear key issues -- including his planned re-election by parliament and his dual role as president and army chief -- later this year.

The United States, the military ruler's close ally in the "war on terror", said the judicial dispute was a "matter of deep concern" while rights groups have warned of a constitutional crisis in Pakistan.

"This is the begining of the end of president Musharraf, his cronies and collaborators," said Khwaja Asif, a senior leader of former premier Nawaz Sharif's Pakistan Muslim League party at the protest in Islamabad.

In Islamabad police seized Qazi Hussain Ahmed, the president of Pakistan's main alliance of religious parties, the Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA) or United Action Front, when he tried to break through a cordon, AFP reporters said.

Security forces erected barbed wire and concrete barricades to seal off the Supreme Court but hundreds of people including lawyers entered the court compound as Chaudhry arrived, a reporter said.

A crowd of around 1,000 people outside the court chanted "Down with Musharraf dog", "Go Musharraf go" and "Allahu Akbar (God is Greatest)" and waved black banners.

Ahmed -- a fundamentalist and vocal opponent of Musharraf because of his failure to restore full democracy and his ties to Washington -- had earlier led a session of Friday prayers in front of parliament lodges.

Police also tear-gassed and baton-charged opposition workers who came out of a mosque near a key intersection in the eastern city of Lahore, as well as lawyers outside Lahore High Court, witnesses said.

The opposition rally in Lahore was also attended by former president Rafiq Tarar, they said. More than 50 people were arrested, witnesses said.

In the northwestern city of Peshawar around 1,000 people joined a rally attended by both Islamists and secular parties, while some 300 lawyers marched in Karachi, Pakistan's largest city, witnesses said.

Security forces earlier rounded up nearly 100 lawyers and Islamists across the country in a bid to stifle the protests.

Chaudhry has denied the charges against him and questioned the constitutionality of the judicial council, and said he was roughed-up by police after refusing an official car on the way to an earlier hearing.

Pakistani media said they were under pressure not to portray Chaudhry as a "hero". A private television channel said it had been barred from airing a popular news programme which featured discussions of the crisis.

Information Minister Mohammad Ali Durrani earlier denied that the snowballing crisis had prompted the government to suspend the country's mobile telephone and Internet networks following reports of nationwide disruption.

In further international reaction a group of 70 British lawyers, including Prime Minister Tony Blair's wife, said reports of the "humiliating treatment of the chief justice of Pakistan" was causing "great international unease."

Musharraf spoke about the issue for the first time on Thursday, telling a public meeting that he would accept whatever decision emerges from the ongoing judicial inquiry and that he would address the nation on the outcome.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20070316/ts_afp/pakistanjusticeprotest_070316114758
 
yaar a few days ago BB says in America "I will more supportive to America than Musharraf". Today these things are happening.

Would the government be stupid enough to do all these things? Imagine Durrani was there and trying to stop them and the Police had enough balls to circumvent him. Something's up guys, they are making the situation so that it makes it impossible to support Musharraf.

Musharraf the supporter of freedom of speech
Musharraf the promoter of free press.

Attacks the largest news network in Pakistan? Something's up here. Why's Musharraf in Lahore during all of this? Look beyond the obvious.
 
......................................................................................The seriously grim trend that this whole saga has taken which can have some dangerous consequences if the situation doesn't get under-control. these are a few quote,s or Annalise's by observers from the news above
.....................................................................................
The United States, the military ruler's close ally in the "war on terror", said the judicial dispute was a "matter of deep concern" while rights groups have warned of a constitutional crisis in Pakistan.

Ahmed -- a fundamentalist and vocal opponent of Musharraf because of his failure to restore full democracy and his ties to Washington -- had earlier led a session of Friday prayers in front of parliament lodges.

The opposition rally in Lahore was also attended by former president Rafiq Tarar, they said. More than 50 people were arrested, witnesses said.


In Islamabad police seized Qazi Hussain Ahmed, the president of Pakistan's main alliance of religious parties, the Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA) or United Action Front, when he tried to break through a cordon, AFP reporters said.


crowd of around 1,000 people outside the court chanted "Down with Musharraf dog", "Go Musharraf go" and "Allahu Akbar (God is Greatest)" and waved black banners.

"This is the begining of the end of president Musharraf, his cronies and collaborators," said Khwaja Asif, a senior leader of former premier Nawaz Sharif's Pakistan Muslim League party at the protest in Islamabad.
 
yaar a few days ago BB says in America "I will more supportive to America than Musharraf". Today these things are happening.

Would the government be stupid enough to do all these things? Imagine Durrani was there and trying to stop them and the Police had enough balls to circumvent him. Something's up guys, they are making the situation so that it makes it impossible to support Musharraf.

Musharraf the supporter of freedom of speech
Musharraf the promoter of free press.

Attacks the largest news network in Pakistan? Something's up here. Why's Musharraf in Lahore during all of this? Look beyond the obvious.

chief:army:sir, but we can never rule out a sabotage from within the administration what is your opinion remember Bhutto as the foreign minister resigned turmoil followed yahya came in the scene which many has said was a muted coup de'at including my relatives in the army's.:army:
 
Musharraf needs to come in front of a camera... NOW. They are strongarming him to impose martial law and that too would be political suicide. There is something very unexplainable that's not allowing for calm to take place.
 
My take is that something very powerful, larger than Musharraf is at play here. While the government is engaged with the CJ, the situation of Isloo got out of hands. Punjab police was enacted to deal the final blow. Musharraf needs to be made into a villain and so far Musharraf has given statements favoring Geo News yet supposedly Punjab police was there to stop them from airing things against Musharraf?

The President may just be a victim here who is just looking like a villain. Remember Shaukat Aziz always had allegations against him for being an American agent. A millionaire American with the American nationality and he was the one who first stoked the issues with the CJ. Musharraf acted on his recommendation and sacked the CJ.
 
sir how true Stalin had once said that never ever trust an American!

(???????:ChinaFlag:????????) now thats a bigger question or a possible solution? you be the judge :coffee:
 

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