Committed to PEOPLE'S RIGHT TO KNOW
Vol. 5 Num 1133 Mon. August 06, 2007  
   
International


Pak opposition leader demands resignation of Musharraf


An outspoken Pakistani opposition leader yesterday demanded that President Gen Pervez Musharraf step down so upcoming elections could be held free of his military government's interference.

Javed Hashmi, the acting leader of exiled former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's party, spoke at a news conference Sunday, a day after being released from prison on bail after serving four years of a 23-year sentence for trying to incite a mutiny against Musharraf.

He said Musharraf should allow Sharif and another exiled former prime minister, Benazir Bhutto, to return to Pakistan to contest legislative elections due by early 2008. Presidential elections are also expected soon, with Musharraf likely to seek another five-year term.

Hashmi said Musharraf should step down to prove that he was committed to free and fair elections.

"A man who held presidential elections according to his own wish, how can he be expected to hold transparent elections," Hashmi said at a news conference in the eastern city of Lahore.

Musharraf is facing the toughest period of his rule since he ousted Sharif in a bloodless coup eight years ago, with a combination of rising militant violence and growing political demands for the restoration of full democracy.

Attacks and clashes on Saturday killed 23 people in the northern tribal regions, where pro-Taliban militants have been waging a campaign against Musharraf's administration, a key US ally in the fight against terrorism. It was the latest in almost daily violence that has killed more than 350 people in the past month.

The Supreme Court granted Hashmi bail Friday on charges of treason and inciting an army mutiny against Musharraf. Hashmi will be free while the court considers whether it should review his case, which rights and opposition groups have criticised as politically motivated.

Hashni told hundreds of members of Sharif's Pakistan Muslim League-N who had gathered to greet him outside prison on Saturday that "true freedom for me will come the day when we will get rid of those generals who toppled the elected government."

In remarks aired Sunday, Benazir reiterated her demand that Musharraf quit the army if he wants another term as president.

"We are opposed to everything to do with a uniformed presidency whether it is elections now or tomorrow or the day after," Benazir said in comments broadcast by Geo TV.

Benazir said her party has not yet decided whether to support Musharraf in his re-election bid, stand its own candidate for president, or boycott the vote.

Picture
Javed Hashmi (C), senior party leader of former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, waves to supporters and activists after his release from Kot Lakhpat central jail in Lahore on Saturday. PHOTO: AFP