Khalids
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Musharraf's fans are dying for him and he is enjoying his life in London.
Musharraf plays tabla at London concert
Age Correspondent
Islamabad
Aug. 2: Former Pakistan military ruler Pervez Musharraf has started playing tabla in London where he might stay in exile for years, a British parliamentarian said.
"I heard him play tabla myself. It was during a (recent) music show in London," Lord Nazir Ahmed, a member of the British House of Lords, told a group of journalists here at a reception. Lord Ahmed, who has seriously taken up with the British government the issue of providing extraordinary security to Pervez Musharraf, said that two guards always accompany the former dictator even when he goes to attend private music functions arranged for him by his friends in London.
According to Lord Ahmed, Mr Musharraf was recently invited as chief guest to a music show where he felt that the "tabla nawaz" (drum beater) accompanying the singer had gone out of rhythm.
Dissatisfied, rather irritated, by tabla performers odd beats, the former military ruler himself jumped to the stage and entertained the audience with the "best of beats" his agile fingers could extract, Lord Ahmed said. Back home, on Friday, Pakistans Supreme Court declared the imposition of emergency and subsequent sacking of judges by Pervez Musharraf on November 3, 2007 as illegal, unconstitutional and ultra-constitutional. Mr Musharraf is the only among several Pakistan dictators to face such embarrassment after losing power.
Mr Musharraf had imposed emergency in the country on November 3, 2007 and sacked over 60 judges of the superior judiciary. He had to however, quit under immense political pressure in August 2008.
British media reports suggest Mr Musharraf will stay in exile in the United Kingdom.
Saudi Arabia has also offered political asylum to Pervez Musharraf.
Musharraf plays tabla at London concert
Age Correspondent
Islamabad
Aug. 2: Former Pakistan military ruler Pervez Musharraf has started playing tabla in London where he might stay in exile for years, a British parliamentarian said.
"I heard him play tabla myself. It was during a (recent) music show in London," Lord Nazir Ahmed, a member of the British House of Lords, told a group of journalists here at a reception. Lord Ahmed, who has seriously taken up with the British government the issue of providing extraordinary security to Pervez Musharraf, said that two guards always accompany the former dictator even when he goes to attend private music functions arranged for him by his friends in London.
According to Lord Ahmed, Mr Musharraf was recently invited as chief guest to a music show where he felt that the "tabla nawaz" (drum beater) accompanying the singer had gone out of rhythm.
Dissatisfied, rather irritated, by tabla performers odd beats, the former military ruler himself jumped to the stage and entertained the audience with the "best of beats" his agile fingers could extract, Lord Ahmed said. Back home, on Friday, Pakistans Supreme Court declared the imposition of emergency and subsequent sacking of judges by Pervez Musharraf on November 3, 2007 as illegal, unconstitutional and ultra-constitutional. Mr Musharraf is the only among several Pakistan dictators to face such embarrassment after losing power.
Mr Musharraf had imposed emergency in the country on November 3, 2007 and sacked over 60 judges of the superior judiciary. He had to however, quit under immense political pressure in August 2008.
British media reports suggest Mr Musharraf will stay in exile in the United Kingdom.
Saudi Arabia has also offered political asylum to Pervez Musharraf.