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Pakistan âsinking shipâ gives ex PM chance to return
(AFP)
29 May 2007
LONDON - Nawaz Sharif, who was ousted eight years ago as Pakistanâs prime minister by General Pervez Musharraf, senses the âsinking shipâ of military rule in Islamabad offers him a chance to return home soon.
In an interview from exile in London, Sharif said an âerraticâ and âimpulsiveâ President Musharraf is comitting crimes and blunders in a desperate bid to resist a rising public backlash to his actions.
âI think the chances (of his political survival) are bleak and they are getting bleaker day by day,â Sharif told AFP Monday from his offices decorated with the Pakistani flag, a white crescent and star on a green background.
Long at loggerheads with Pakistanâs Islamists for his close ties with Washington in the war on terrorism, Musharraf now faces even broader opposition since he suspended Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry on March 9.
The president says Chaudhry was suspended for misconduct, but his opponents say Musharraf wants to weaken the courts ahead of any legal challenges to his bid to remain army chief past the constitutional time limit of the end of 2007.
Sharifâs ouster from power in 1999 was widely welcomed by ordinary Pakistanis tired of corruption under his rule.
Now in Britain after years of exile in Saudi Arabia, Sharif intends to go home before general elections later this year or early 2008, even though Musharraf has vowed to bar Sharif and former premier Benazir Bhutto from doing so.
Despite the risk of arrest on corruption charges or even to his own safety, Sharif, 46, said: âIâm not scared of taking any risks if I can play a role to save my country.â
He claimed that Musharraf, 63, is resorting to increasingly desperate and violent measures to stay in power.
He accused Musharraf and MQM party leader Altaf Hussein, who also lives in London, of having âmastermindedâ the May 12-13 killings in Karachi of 40 people who protested Chaudhryâs suspension.
The âmassacreâ amounted to the âbiggest blunderâ committed by any Pakistani president, worse than his removal of Chaudry, Sharif said. âThis was state-sponsored carnage and sanctioned personally by Mr. Musharraf.â
Sharif, who heads his own faction of the Pakistan Muslim League, admitted he would like to return to power but said it depended on the legal and political process in Pakistan.
What is certain, he said, is that a broad-based popular movement is now pushing for free and fair elections, and Musharraf âcannot dissallow any party or any leader to come back to Pakistanâ for the polls.
âThere will be soon the time I return to Pakistan,â he said, declining to say whether he would return in months, weeks or days.
âThree months ago, I thought it was still far away. But I donât think the same way now. I think it is drawing nearer and nearer now.â
He said he has âcordialâ relations with the 53-year-old Bhutto, the head of the Pakistan Peopleâs Party (PPP).
Like Bhutto, Sharif is a mainstream politician who governed Pakistan twice between 1988 and 1999. Like Bhutto, he argues that dictatorship breeds the Islamist extremism that threatens both Pakistan and the West.
However, he appeared to suggest Bhutto may have violated a charter for democracy that the two had signed by talking with Musharraf, amid conflicting reports that the president was trying to strike a deal with her to broaden his fragile support.
Sharif, who said he has never had talks with Musharraf or any of his associates, stands by the charter which binds the signatories to no ânegotiations, no deal with dictators.â
âWhosoever enters a deal with a person like Musharraf would also seal his or her fate if he does so. And if you associate yourself with a sinking ship, you would be ...as much a loser as the other person,â he said.
âI donât think any ... politician or political party can bail Musharraf out of the crisis he is in today,â he said.
Sharif said he had held talks with officials in Britainâs Foreign Office and US Congressmen about the situation in Pakistan while also retaining close contact with former US president Bill Clinton, whom he describes as a friend.
http://www.khaleejtimes.com/Display...subcontinent_May1136.xml§ion=subcontinent
(AFP)
29 May 2007
LONDON - Nawaz Sharif, who was ousted eight years ago as Pakistanâs prime minister by General Pervez Musharraf, senses the âsinking shipâ of military rule in Islamabad offers him a chance to return home soon.
In an interview from exile in London, Sharif said an âerraticâ and âimpulsiveâ President Musharraf is comitting crimes and blunders in a desperate bid to resist a rising public backlash to his actions.
âI think the chances (of his political survival) are bleak and they are getting bleaker day by day,â Sharif told AFP Monday from his offices decorated with the Pakistani flag, a white crescent and star on a green background.
Long at loggerheads with Pakistanâs Islamists for his close ties with Washington in the war on terrorism, Musharraf now faces even broader opposition since he suspended Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry on March 9.
The president says Chaudhry was suspended for misconduct, but his opponents say Musharraf wants to weaken the courts ahead of any legal challenges to his bid to remain army chief past the constitutional time limit of the end of 2007.
Sharifâs ouster from power in 1999 was widely welcomed by ordinary Pakistanis tired of corruption under his rule.
Now in Britain after years of exile in Saudi Arabia, Sharif intends to go home before general elections later this year or early 2008, even though Musharraf has vowed to bar Sharif and former premier Benazir Bhutto from doing so.
Despite the risk of arrest on corruption charges or even to his own safety, Sharif, 46, said: âIâm not scared of taking any risks if I can play a role to save my country.â
He claimed that Musharraf, 63, is resorting to increasingly desperate and violent measures to stay in power.
He accused Musharraf and MQM party leader Altaf Hussein, who also lives in London, of having âmastermindedâ the May 12-13 killings in Karachi of 40 people who protested Chaudhryâs suspension.
The âmassacreâ amounted to the âbiggest blunderâ committed by any Pakistani president, worse than his removal of Chaudry, Sharif said. âThis was state-sponsored carnage and sanctioned personally by Mr. Musharraf.â
Sharif, who heads his own faction of the Pakistan Muslim League, admitted he would like to return to power but said it depended on the legal and political process in Pakistan.
What is certain, he said, is that a broad-based popular movement is now pushing for free and fair elections, and Musharraf âcannot dissallow any party or any leader to come back to Pakistanâ for the polls.
âThere will be soon the time I return to Pakistan,â he said, declining to say whether he would return in months, weeks or days.
âThree months ago, I thought it was still far away. But I donât think the same way now. I think it is drawing nearer and nearer now.â
He said he has âcordialâ relations with the 53-year-old Bhutto, the head of the Pakistan Peopleâs Party (PPP).
Like Bhutto, Sharif is a mainstream politician who governed Pakistan twice between 1988 and 1999. Like Bhutto, he argues that dictatorship breeds the Islamist extremism that threatens both Pakistan and the West.
However, he appeared to suggest Bhutto may have violated a charter for democracy that the two had signed by talking with Musharraf, amid conflicting reports that the president was trying to strike a deal with her to broaden his fragile support.
Sharif, who said he has never had talks with Musharraf or any of his associates, stands by the charter which binds the signatories to no ânegotiations, no deal with dictators.â
âWhosoever enters a deal with a person like Musharraf would also seal his or her fate if he does so. And if you associate yourself with a sinking ship, you would be ...as much a loser as the other person,â he said.
âI donât think any ... politician or political party can bail Musharraf out of the crisis he is in today,â he said.
Sharif said he had held talks with officials in Britainâs Foreign Office and US Congressmen about the situation in Pakistan while also retaining close contact with former US president Bill Clinton, whom he describes as a friend.
http://www.khaleejtimes.com/Display...subcontinent_May1136.xml§ion=subcontinent