Logically it would have reasoned that before going after Musharraf with an impeachment it may have been politically correct to wrestle away the threatening constitutional power and it would have been easy to muster a 2/3rd majority for a one-point constitutional amendment, as its on record that Yousuf Raza Gilani was elected into the Prime Ministers house with over 2/3rd number of votes.
But the sly politician had his eyes set on ensuring that the ultimate trump card remains within the presidency in safe custody until he finally accedes to the thrown and then can keep an ultimate strangle hold on Pakistan with absolute no recourse for a five year unhindered rule of corruption.
ISLAMABAD, Aug. 14, 2008
PRESIDENT Pervez Musharraf and Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani, for the first time in country's history, organised two separate ceremonies to mark Independence Day, reports BBC.
Musharraf organised 'Salam-e-Pakistan' function late on Wednesday night at Aiwan-e-Sadr, which Gilani, his Cabinet members and Army Chief General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani did not attend.
However, Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee, heads of Pakistan Air Force and Navy attended the ceremony held Aiwan-e-Sadr.
On the other side, General Kayani, heads of all three armed forces, ministers, senators, ambassadors and journalists attended the ceremony held at Convention Centre on Thursday morning in which PM Gilani raised the national flag.
When contacted, ISPR spokesman Major General Athar Abbas said that COAS General Kayani attended a ceremony in connection with Independence Day at Kakul late on Wednesday night. He confirmed that the COAS participated in PM's flag-hoisting ceremony on Thursday morning.
Yousaf Khan from Karachi adds: President Musharraf is left with no option but to resign. Musharraf's current dilemma is that most of his trusted aides of yesteryears, who were ever willing to give him sincere advice, have either been eased out or have withdrawn themselves from the centre-stage, mainly to avoid any unpleasantness. It is now being said that the composition of the president's current team is such that their individual or collective advice can be described at best as a recipe for disaster.
Who are these last remaining friends and self-styled advisers who want the president not to bow down under pressure? Well-placed sources said that the group comprises only a handful of people, many of whom have their own personal interest in his survival as the head of the state.
Two seasoned lawyers who share a last name, a political dropout from the PPP, and a journalist-publisher who boasts of having ghost-written Musharraf's memoirs appear to be what is left of the president's once formidable team of advisers. And this, as he finds himself in the line of fire.
Sources say the president's frustration was compounded after getting a clear signal from the army's top command that they would prefer to keep themselves away from what has largely been seen as a political and constitutional battle. Now, the president's only hope lay in the current Supreme Court �" his own personal creation �" and the kind of support he may get from political allies, particularly the MQM.
According to diplomatic sources, Chief of the Army Staff, General Ashfaq Kiani has sent a clear message to his former boss by avoiding the Independence Day celebrations at the Presidency that the army high command was not ready to support him.
The sources further said that Musharraf has expressed his desire to live in the country after quitting his post.
"The President has been confined to a blind alley and seriously considering the option of resignation", the sources continued, adding that his traditional supporter Sheikh Rashid has also also left Musharraf at the mercy of the fate. Though Amin Fahim and Pagaro are till sympathetic towards the totally isolated Musharraf but they, too, can withdraw their support any time.
Meanwhile, PML-N chief Mian Nawaz Sharif has refused to provide Musharraf with the 'luxury' of addressing the nation saying the people have already rejected the dictator.
Although conflicting signals still emanate from the president's camp, some of the people directly involved in the process say that the mounting pressure of the impeachment lobby, defections and desertions in the ranks of his one-time political allies, and hectic manoeuvring by senior American and British diplomats may soon compel Gen (retd) Musharraf to arrive at a decision. And though some of his self-styled advisers are continuing to tell him to fight it out till the end, a reliable source in the establishment says the president believes that the time has come for him to reassess the situation.
Under the circumstances, there are rumours that the president may announce his decision within the next 48 hours.
Musharraf Seen Quitting
Aides, Party Officials
Reach Deal in Easing
President's Departure
By ZAHID HUSSAIN and PETER WONACOTT
August 14, 2008 3:34 p.m.
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan -- President Pervez Musharraf is expected to leave office in the next few days before Pakistan's Parliament takes up impeachment proceedings against him, following a breakthrough in secret talks designed to ease his departure from office, people familiar with the situation say.
"Musharraf will neither face impeachment nor be prosecuted," one person said. Mr. Musharraf is expected to step down once a guarantee of safe passage and immunity from prosecution has been struck. "We expect a major development in the next 48 hours," this person said.
The secret talks have involved Mr. Musharraf's aides and members of the leading political party.
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Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf addresses the gathering of Independence Day ceremony in Islamabad on Wednesday. |
Mr. Musharraf has been under intensifying political pressure to quit after leaders from the ruling coalition government said they would press impeachment charges against him in Parliament, in part based on his actions late last year when he declared a temporary state of emergency. After doing so, he was re-elected to a five-year term as president in a controversial vote by an electoral college.
Since February, Mr. Musharraf, a key ally in the U.S.-led war on terror, has been sidelined politically after democratic elections in which the Pakistan People's Party, led by the widower of slain former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, was the biggest winner. It leads a coalition government.
Mr. Musharraf's continuation in office has been a constant source of friction between the coalition partners, who finally resolved to try to remove him if he wouldn't quit. Mr. Musharraf's political standing was further eroded this week when four provincial assemblies overwhelmingly passed resolutions that told him to call for a vote of confidence or step down.
KEY DATES IN MUSHARRAF'S TENURE
Oct. 7, 1998 - Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif appoints Musharraf chief of army staff.
May 2, 1999 - Pakistani and Indian troops clash at Kargil in divided Kashmir. Sharif later orders Musharraf to withdraw under U.S. pressure.
Oct. 12, 1999 - Musharraf takes power in a coup.
June 20, 2001 - Musharraf appoints himself president of Pakistan while staying army chief.
Sept. 11, 2001 - Al Qaeda launches attacks in the U.S. and Musharraf subsequently throws Pakistan's support to America, abandoning the Taliban and enraging many devout Muslims.
April 30, 2002 - Musharraf holds a widely criticized referendum to secure support continue as president for a five-year term as president.
Oct. 10, 2002 - Elections observers consider flawed install a pro-Musharraf parliament.
Dec. 14, 2003 - Explosives wreck a bridge in Rawalpindi just after Musharraf's car has passed. Days later, Musharraf survives twin suicide car bombings on the same road.
Dec. 30, 2004 - Musharraf reneges on promise to stand down as army chief, gains support of parliament to stay on until 2007.
Oct. 6, 2007 - Parliament elects Musharraf for a new five-year term in a vote opposition boycotts.
Nov. 3, 2007 - Musharraf declares state of emergency, suspending the constitution and independent-minded judges as the Supreme Court was set to rule on the legality of his election.
Nov. 28, 2007 - Musharraf steps down as army chief, becomes a civilian president.
Dec. 15, 2007 - Musharraf lifts state of emergency.
Feb. 18, 2008 - Pakistan parliamentary elections bring Musharraf opponents to power.
Aug. 8, 2008 - Ruling coalition leaders announce they will seek Musharraf's impeachement.
Secret talks between Mr. Musharraf's aides and PPP officials began last week after the military, which so far has stayed out of the political fray, made it clear they wouldn't allow their former chief to be humiliated. Mr. Musharraf stepped down as army chief when he started his new presidential term.
The leadership of the military, however, has started to come to the conclusion that Mr. Musharraf wouldn't be able to remain in office given the groundswell of political opinion against him. Mr. Musharraf has consistently said he will fight the impeachment charges and, as recently as Wednesday night at a gathering at the presidential palace, told supporters he would contest and win, according to attendees.
Some people continued to suggest that Mr. Musharraf wouldn't be driven from office. Muhammad Intikhab Khan, a top official in the pro-Musharraf Pakistan Muslim League (Q), said he believed the president would fight impeachment. He said the president Wednesday told a group of about 40 officials that he would "fight the impeachment" and believed he still had the votes to prevail. To the question of whether he would quit, "no he's not going to," Mr. Khan said.
But Mr. Musharraf's calls for reconciliation and political stability, made in a speech late Wednesday on the eve of Pakistan's independence day, were rejected by coalition officials Thursday, and an increasing number of political allies also have deserted him. Sherry Rehman, minister of information, said impeachment proceedings would begin Monday or Tuesday. She said the government had 325 votes, or a 30-vote cushion to impeach the president. "There's no turning back from this process," she said.
Mr. Musharraf, 65 years old, came to power in a bloodless coup in 1999, deposing then-Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. Mr. Sharif, head of the Pakistan Muslim League (N) and a supporter of the coalition government, has been a major proponent of Mr. Musharraf's impeachment and of the reinstatement of judges, including the chief justice of the Supreme Court, who were fired by Mr. Musharraf last year.
While Mr. Sharif and the PPP have been arguing over what to do with Mr. Musharraf and how to reinstate the judges, Pakistan's economy has turned sour and the nation has faced a rising Islamist insurgency that not only is hurting country but also feeding the insurgency against NATO troops in neighboring Afghanistan.
If Mr. Musharraf leaves office, it will remove one major political sticking point in the coalition. But it is unclear who would replace him and whether the government could then move forward to tackle the country's growing problems.
Write to Peter Wonacott at peter.wonacott@wsj.com
Musharraf Is Expected to Resign in Next Few Days
Published: August 14, 2008
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan "” Faced with desertions by his political supporters and the neutrality of the Pakistani military, President Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan, an important ally of the United States, is expected to resign in the next few days rather than face impeachment charges, Pakistani politicians and Western diplomats said Thursday.
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Agence France-Presse "” Getty Images
Pakistan's president, Pervez Musharraf, addressed a gathering at an Independence Day ceremony in Islamabad on Aug. 13. Mr. Musharraf called for political reconciliation in Pakistan, in an apparent appeal to opponents who seeking his impeachment.
His departure from office would be likely to unleash new instability in the country as the two main parties in the civilian government jockeyed for the division of power.
The details of how Mr. Musharraf would exit, and whether he would be able to stay in Pakistan "” apparently his strong preference "” or would seek residency abroad were now under discussion, the politicians said.
Mr. Musharraf was expected to resign before the governing coalition presented charges for impeachment to the Parliament early next week, said Nisar Ali Khan, a senior official in the Pakistani Muslim League-N, the minority partner in the coalition government.
Similarly, Sheikh Mansoor Ahmed, a senior official of the Pakistan Peoples Party, the major party in the coalition, said Thursday that the president would probably leave in the "next 72 hours."
Inexorable pressure has built on Mr. Musharraf, a member of the military by profession and often impetuous by nature, to take a way out from the current crisis that would save him from embarrassing disclosures during impeachment procedures and that would protect the nation from a prolonged political agony.
The United States and Britain sought last year to put a democratic face on the unpopular Mr. Musharraf "” who was then also chief of the army "” by engineering the return of the opposition leader Benazir Bhutto as his partner in a putative power-sharing arrangement. Now the two countries are virtual bystanders as Mr. Musharraf's rule seems to be coming to an end.
Ms. Bhutto was assassinated in December, and her husband, Asif Ali Zardari, now the leader of the Pakistan Peoples Party, emerged as a major force urging Mr. Musharraf's ouster last week. The two major political parties in the coalition said last week that they would seek to remove Mr. Musharraf, and that the grounds for impeachment included mismanagement of the economy, his imposition of emergency rule in November and the firing of nearly 60 judges.
The American ambassador to Pakistan, Anne W. Patterson, met with senior officials of the political parties seeking Mr. Musharraf's ouster in the past few days, and a senior diplomat in the British Foreign Office, Sir Mark Lyall Grant, met with Mr. Musharraf here this week, Pakistani officials and a Western diplomat said.
The envoys did not argue against Mr. Musharraf's departure but rather stressed that he should be granted as dignified an exit as possible, the Pakistani officials said. The officials and diplomats spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly on the matter.
"The United States is now accepting Musharraf's removal as a fait accompli," Mr. Khan said.
"They just want that he should not be humiliated. We don't want his humiliation either."
The Bush administration's continued support of Mr. Musharraf, anchored by the personal relationship between the two presidents, has infuriated the four-month-old civilian coalition, which routed the president's party in February elections. "Now the reaction from the American friends is positive," Mr. Khan said.
While Mr. Bush has kept up his relationship with Mr. Musharraf "” including regular telephone conversations "” the administration has also been trying to build its relations with the new Pakistani government, as it demands greater action against militants based in Pakistan.
The coalition parties said that the impeachment charges would be presented to Parliament early next week, and that the charges would be far-ranging and touch on, among other things, Mr. Musharraf's decision to suspend the Constitution last November and to introduce emergency rule.
The leader of the Pakistan Muslim League-N, Nawaz Sharif, has demanded that if Mr. Musharraf is impeached, a trial must follow, a proceeding that would be very messy, and could rip the country apart.
In his hour of need, as the politicians move against him, Mr. Musharraf has been greeted by silence from the military, his former power base.
As army chief of staff, Mr. Musharraf grabbed power in October 1999, overthrowing Mr. Sharif, who was then prime minister.
Mr. Sharif has maneuvered for Mr. Musharraf's ouster since returning to power after the February elections.
As president and army chief, Mr. Musharraf worked hand in hand with the United States against terrorism until last November, when he handed the army post to Gen. Ashfaq Parvaz Kayani, who promised to keep the army out of politics.
Since assuming the army leadership, General Kayani has remained true to his promise.
The neutrality of the military has actually tipped the scales against Mr. Musharraf, said Arif Nizami, editor of the daily newspaper The Nation.
"They are not even putting pressure on the civilians" to stop the president's ouster, Mr. Nizami said of the military. "They are saying, 'If you do it according to the book, it's none of our business.' They have pushed against Mr. Musharraf."
Mr. Musharraf gave a routine but subdued national day address on Wednesday, calling for reconciliation. But by then many of his supporters had left him. He was seeking solace from "only a handful of people," most of whom harbored personal interests in Mr. Musharraf's survival, according to an account in a national newspaper, Dawn, by Zaffar Abbas, a respected political journalist.
Many members of Mr. Musharraf's political party have deserted him, although a powerful political group, Muttahida Qaumi Movement, which is based in Karachi, still supports him, Mr. Abbas wrote.
One prominent supporter, Aftab Ahmed Sherpao, who served as the interior minister in Mr. Musharraf's government, said Thursday that he could no longer justify his allegiance to the president.
Mr. Sherpao represents a parliamentary constituency in the North-West Frontier Province on the edge of the tribal area, where the Taliban are winning control of village after village with little opposition from the military or government forces.
After consulting "with every friend" in his area, "not a single person was in favor of Musharraf," Mr. Sherpao said.
"With one voice they said: 'This is the time you have to be with the democratic forces.' "
While it appeared almost certain that Mr. Musharraf would leave before facing impeachment, there was great uncertainty over what would follow.
"Everyone feels that the Musharraf era is over," the Daily Times wrote in an editorial on Thursday. "But no one is actually in the mood to see what it is going to be like to be in the post-Musharraf era."
Many Pakistanis believe the country could suffer even greater instability after Mr. Musharraf goes.
The coalition partnership between Mr. Zardari and Mr. Sharif became troubled by deep suspicions between the two sides soon after the February elections, and the current accord on ousting Mr. Musharraf is likely to fragment as soon as he is gone, politicians say.
There is little agreement, for example, between the two men on the choice of the next president. That question is a subject of almost as much jockeying within the coalition as the plan to get rid of Mr. Musharraf.
Mr. Zardari, a highly controversial figure in Pakistan who was jailed on corruption charges for more than eight years, would like the post, according to his party supporters and senior members of the Pakistan Muslim League-N. The charges against Mr. Zardari were dismissed as part of an amnesty agreement when Ms. Bhutto returned to Pakistan.
Mr. Sharif is opposed to Mr. Zardari's ascendancy to the presidency, but would go along with it if the presidency were stripped of many of its current powers, Pakistan Muslim League-N officials said.
According to the Constitution, an election for the president by the national Parliament and four provincial assemblies must be held 30 days after the office becomes vacant. Mr. Sharif and Mr. Zardari agreed last week that the choice of a presidential nominee would be made by a consensus between them.
"We very, very strongly feel it has to be a man of national consensus, a man of stature, a man everyone looks up to as a head of state," Mr. Khan said.