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Sharifs' return

Are you in Favor of Sharif's Return ?

  • Yes

    Votes: 4 19.0%
  • No

    Votes: 16 76.2%
  • Not Sure

    Votes: 1 4.8%

  • Total voters
    21
  • Poll closed .
“As a matter of fact, Ms Benazir Bhutto wants both scions of Murtaza Bhutto to enter politics and she loves them very much,” said Anwar Bhutto, who is a member of the National Assembly from the constituency of ZA Bhutto. He said that as a member of the community, he was also interested in a patch-up of the Bhutto family’s estranged members. Anwar agreed that Fatima should join the race to become her grandfather’s political heir but he was cognizant of the fact that Bhutto’s son Murtaza himself could not win the support of ZA Bhutto’s followers. “Benazir Bhutto was the political heir while Murtaza was alive and I don’t foresee Fatima as a rival,” he said. “After all, she should be with her aunt against the enemies of the Bhutto family.”
Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan

In the PML-N there is talk about NS's son for politics. This is ridiculous.

Does the remaining leadership of these parties have no ambition? Do they have no shame in promoting what basically amounts to "dynastic rule"? There is a reason why it failed everywhere. We need to get off this addiction to personalities.
 
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:cheesy: What did this guy write????????????? Did anybody get it? Whatever it was, it did not make any sense and was immature.

well you need intelligence to get it.if u didn't get what i said u obviously don't have it.:rofl:
 
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From the Voiceofaa post you will clearly see, a man who cannot follow an agreement he made how you suppose to run this country.

Regards
Wilco
 
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Exactly! When you look at the success of the parliamentary system in India, it has been the result of parties, not individuals. New leadership and ideas keep emerging even when the choice is still primarily between two parties. NS and BB still talk about their times in power as if Pakistan had become a "land of milk and honey"! What progress can we expect when they won't even accept their mistakes.

PPP and PML-N, YES!

BB and NS, NO!

I completely agree with agnostic that until there is one man Party system is over these politicians should not be allowed to participate in the active politics.



Regards
Wilco
 
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What did this guy write????????????? Did anybody get it? Whatever it was, it did not make any sense and was immature.
Wilco ...are you General Musharraf with an alias ?
Neither do this make any sense.


Regards
Wilco
 
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Ok Nawaz Sharif just landed in Islamabad. Security is tighten up, with all the Mullahs who were going to create trouble under arrest. The plane gates are waiting to be opened, its been 30 minutes since the plane landed.
 
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All passengers are out except NS.



Regards
Wilco
 
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All passengers are out except NS.



Regards
Wilco

There is a possibility that he might end up in Saudi Arabia, or via a C-130/Personal plane transported to the jail in a different city (Rawalpindi?).
 
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Whatever you say, It is the right of very citizen to their country. Anything thats says otherwise is unconsititutional according to the consititution of Pakistan.
You think he is corrupt, put him in jail, but nobody has the right to deny him his right to his homeland.
 
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Pakistan 'deports' ex-PM Sharif


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Nawaz Sharif (centre) was surrounded on his arrival

Former Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has been arrested and deported within hours of returning to Pakistan from exile, officials say.
After landing in Islamabad he was charged and put on board a plane, reportedly bound for Saudi Arabia.

Mr Sharif says he wants to challenge President Pervez Musharraf, who ousted him in a 1999 coup, ahead of elections.

Mr Sharif arrived home weeks after Pakistan's Supreme Court affirmed his right to return.

On board the plane which flew him home from London, Mr Sharif told the BBC he wanted to help restore the rule of law.

34db6c3aa906243524f3d3b6baace9f7.jpg

"It's democracy versus dictatorship," he said.

I have a duty, I have a responsibility, I have a national obligation to fulfil at all costs and that is democracy

Nawaz Sharif

Once the plane arrived in Islamabad, paramilitary troops surrounded it and there was a stand-off on board as Mr Sharif refused to hand over his passport to immigration officials for nearly two hours.

Eventually he agreed to leave the plane and was escorted to the airport's VIP lounge.

But shortly afterwards, he was separated from his entourage, returned to the tarmac and put on board a helicopter. Later, he was apparently transferred to a plane bound for Jeddah in Saudi Arabia.

Large numbers of police had set up barricades on roads to prevent Mr Sharif's supporters from reaching the airport, while all domestic flights from Islamabad on Monday were listed as cancelled.

Plans abandoned

There were reports of clashes between police and crowds of Mr Sharif's supporters in Islamabad, Rawalpindi, and Attok, where shots were fired and several people were said to have been injured.

One worker from Mr Sharif's Muslim League party (PML-N) told the BBC he and about 20 others had been badly beaten by police outside the airport.

KEY DATES
14 Sept: Date Ex-PM Benazir Bhutto will announce details of her homecoming
15 Sep-15 Oct: Timeframe Gen Musharraf has set for his re-election as president by parliament
October: Parliament expires and general election must be held

On Sunday, the party said more than 2,000 supporters had been arrested by the Pakistan authorities, while almost its entire leadership had been detained.

Supporters planned to launch a legal challenge to the deportation, which was "a violation of the court order under which Nawaz Sharif was allowed to arrive and stay in Pakistan," his aide, Sadique ul-Farooq, told the Associated Press.

Mr Sharif was exiled to Saudi Arabia in 2000 after being deposed, under what the government says was an agreement that he stay in exile for 10 years.

The former prime minister has denied there was ever such a deal.

Mr Sharif had planned to lead a triumphal motorcade from Islamabad to Lahore, his political power base, but he was aware he might not be allowed the opportunity.

He decided at the last moment to leave his brother Shahbaz, also a politician, behind in the UK "to hold the fort" in case he were jailed or deported.

Political crisis

Mr Musharraf has made no secret of his contempt for Mr Sharif, describing him as corrupt and incompetent.

But for the army, a decision to arrest him is as much a political as a legal decision, says the BBC's M Ilyas Khan.

The military does not want to make Mr Sharif into a political martyr but it also does not want to see him campaigning for power, he says.

General Musharraf has been struggling to contain protests that have grown in strength since he tried to remove the head of the Supreme Court, Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry.

The president plans to seek a new five-year term in office in an election due in the next month.

BBC NEWS | South Asia | Pakistan 'deports' ex-PM Sharif
 
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Sharif deported from Pakistan
:wave:

By ZARAR KHAN, Associated Press Writer
8 minutes ago

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - Former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif was deported to Saudi Arabia Monday, hours after he had landed in Pakistan following seven years in exile hoping to campaign against the country's U.S.-allied military ruler, officials said.

About four hours after he arrived on a flight from London, Sharif was taken into custody and charged with corruption, but then quickly spirited to another plane and flown out of Pakistan toward Jiddah, a close aide to President Gen. Pervez Musharraf said.

An intelligence official confirmed the information. Both officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to speak to media. There was no immediate formal announcement from the government.

Sharif's deportation apparently sidelines a powerful political enemy of the general, but it is likely to deepen Musharraf's growing unpopularity and reinforce public perceptions that he is an authoritarian ruler ahead of presidential and legislative elections.

The deportation came despite a landmark Supreme Court ruling last month that the two-time former premier, whose elected government was ousted by Musharraf in a 1999 coup, had the right to return to Pakistan and that authorities should not obstruct him.

Sharif's brother Shahbaz said their party would submit a petition with the court to challenge the deportation.

"This will be counted as the blackest day in Pakistan's history," he said on Geo TV. "I do not have words to describe my grief. This is a tragedy for Pakistan that a dictator is disregarding the people."

Musharraf's grip on power has faltered after a failed attempt to oust the country's top judge ignited mass protests, but he is still plans to seek a new five-year term in office by mid-October.

His government is also struggling to combat surging Islamic extremism that has spread from the Afghan border where al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden is believed to be hiding.

The deportation is likely to stoke confrontation with opposition activists, who battled police Monday morning on roads leading to Islamabad airport that authorities had blockaded with trucks, tractors and barbed wire.

Police fired tear gas and supporters threw rocks in at least two locations near Islamabad and also a bridge on main highway leading to the capital from Pakistan's northwest frontier. Several people were injured at each clash, Associated Press reporters said.

"We wanted to get to the airport to welcome the person who has challenged the dictator," said Asif Ali, one of the Sharif supporters near Islamabad. "We were tear-gassed and baton-charged."

Former President Rafiq Tarar, a Sharif loyalist, said he was roughed up in one confrontation. He declared the government was "anti-Pakistan." Witnesses said Tarar was later arrested.

At least four other senior opposition leaders were also put under house arrest, officials said.

Interior Ministry spokesman Brig. Iqbal Cheema said they were arrested "to ensure the maintenance of public order," under a regulation that allows authorities to detain suspects for up to three months without charge.

Sharif was sent into exile in Saudi Arabia seven years ago after he was convicted of terrorism and hijacking charges in Pakistan following the coup. Under a deal with Musharraf, Sharif allegedly promised to stay away for 10 years.

Saudi intelligence chief Prince Muqrin bin Abdulaziz Al Saud said Saturday in Islamabad that Sharif should respect the agreement and that Saudi Arabia was ready to take him back.

After arriving by a Pakistan International Airlines flight from London, it had initially appeared Sharif was being arrested but would be allowed to stay in the country.

Sharif was surrounded by black-uniformed commandos inside the plane then shifted to the airport's VIP lounge, where a senior investigator from Pakistan's anti-corruption body served an arrest warrant.

The investigator, Azhar Mahmood Qazi, said Sharif was being arrested on money-laundering and corruption charges stemming from a sugar mill business several years ago. Sharif was accused of laundering $21.2 million, he said.

Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain, president of Pakistan's ruling party, said Sharif had been given a choice of going into exile again or be arrested. He said Sharif had chosen detention.

But it soon emerged soon after Sharif was being flown out of the country to Saudi Arabia.

He had planned to travel in a grand motorcade to his home and political base in Lahore, about 180 miles to the south of Islamabad, to kickstart his campaign against Musharraf.

Sharif's return was widely seen as a challenge to Musharraf's efforts to reach a possible power-sharing deal with another exiled former premier Benazir Bhutto that would allow him to extend his rule.

But Bhutto herself now will likely face growing opposition within her own party to the idea of teaming up with the military leader. Like Sharif, she wants to contest general elections due by mid-January 2008.

Bhutto says she also plans to return to Pakistan, regardless of the outcome of the talks with Musharraf. She is due to announce her return date on Sept. 14.

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Associated Press writers Sadaqat Jan, Munir Ahmad and Alisa Tang in Islamabad contributed to this report.

Sharif deported from Pakistan - Yahoo! News
 
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Whatever you say, It is the right of very citizen to their country. Anything thats says otherwise is unconsititutional according to the consititution of Pakistan.
You think he is corrupt, put him in jail, but nobody has the right to deny him his right to his homeland.

The problem is that NS himself waived that right to "stay in his country and rot in jail" in return for staying in exile for ten years. Granted that such an "agreement" is still unconstitutional, but NS did not care about that when trying to save his own skin. He has a little more than two years left. He should keep his word, adhere to the agreement, shut up and stop this drama to hoodwink the electorate.

He has also essentially called Saad Hariri and the Saudis liars after they made public requests for him to honor the agreement. At this point it could be argued that his return to power could be a huge liability for our relationship with the Saudis.
 
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