KashifAsrar
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ToI dated 28th July feed.
Kashif
Under pressure to quit, Mush meets Benazir
Ishtiaq Ali Mehkri
Karachi: Pakistans politics took a curious turn on Friday as president Pervez Musharraf met former prime minister Benazir Bhutto in Abu Dhabi.
There were reports of a deal being struck between Musharraf and Bhutto, on the preconditions of sacking the Shaukat Aziz government, holding of free and fair polls under a neutral caretaker administration, doffing of presidents uniform and his re-election for another term from the new legislature.
Besides, during his six-day long discussions with his top military aides in Rawalpindi after the reinstatement of the chief justice, Musharraf was advised to seek an honourable exit, The News quoted unnamed sources. Indications to this end came from powerful quarters in the federal capital and the army headquarters on Friday as Musharraf flew to UAE and Saudi Arabia in a move to mend fences with Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif.
There was a consensus in the presidential camp during the discussions that Musharraf was in such a situation that even former PM Benazir Bhuttos political support could not bail him out, the sources said. Musharraf is now at the dead end of the tunnel, said sources. Musharraf s army spokesman Lt Gen Rashid Qureshi, however, denied reports of pressure on the president. But sources confirmed that Musharraf silently noticed observations of the army commanders asking him to look forward for a honourable exit strategy.
Kashif
Under pressure to quit, Mush meets Benazir
Ishtiaq Ali Mehkri
Karachi: Pakistans politics took a curious turn on Friday as president Pervez Musharraf met former prime minister Benazir Bhutto in Abu Dhabi.
There were reports of a deal being struck between Musharraf and Bhutto, on the preconditions of sacking the Shaukat Aziz government, holding of free and fair polls under a neutral caretaker administration, doffing of presidents uniform and his re-election for another term from the new legislature.
Besides, during his six-day long discussions with his top military aides in Rawalpindi after the reinstatement of the chief justice, Musharraf was advised to seek an honourable exit, The News quoted unnamed sources. Indications to this end came from powerful quarters in the federal capital and the army headquarters on Friday as Musharraf flew to UAE and Saudi Arabia in a move to mend fences with Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif.
There was a consensus in the presidential camp during the discussions that Musharraf was in such a situation that even former PM Benazir Bhuttos political support could not bail him out, the sources said. Musharraf is now at the dead end of the tunnel, said sources. Musharraf s army spokesman Lt Gen Rashid Qureshi, however, denied reports of pressure on the president. But sources confirmed that Musharraf silently noticed observations of the army commanders asking him to look forward for a honourable exit strategy.