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Musharraf to resign if ex-CJ restored, his aides say
SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT
NEW YORK - Aides to President Pervez Musharraf believe that he would resign if ex-Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry returned to his post after the new National Assembly starts functioning, according to a dispatch in The New York Times on Wednesday.
The reason given by the unnamed presidential aides was that restoration of the chief justice would reopen the question of his eligibility to be president and the legality of his suspension of the Constitution in November.
The same would happen if lawmakers removed his powers to dissolve Parliament, The Times quoted a close aide as saying in the course of a dispatch on the latest political developments in Pakistan.
"The president will resign," the aide said. "He does not want to be an ineffective president."
An unnamed Western diplomat was quoted as saying: "He (Musharraf) is considering whether he should go. My feeling is Musharraf would not accept a diminished role; either he is in power, or he leaves."
"Yet Mr. Musharraf, who says he will work with whatever government is formed, remains aggressive publicly and seems determined to remain at the helm," The Times noted. "He continues to occupy the Army House, the government residence of the chief of army staff, in the garrison city of Rawalpindi just to the south of the capital, and continues to meet the cabinet, party officials and military officers there."
"He is under pressure, but I don't think he is going to improve," PML-N's leader Zafar-ul-Haq told The Times. "The expressions from him are such. He is adamant, stubborn."
Meanwhile, a dispatch in McClatchy group of newspapers said that the delay in naming a prime minister or a government "threatens to strengthen the man they (political parties) defeated, President Pervez Musharraf."
The dispatch said Western diplomats in Islamabad privately expressed alarm over the political vacuum, which comes as Islamic extremists are conducting a campaign of suicide bombings.
"Some Pakistani politicians contend that interference by the United States and its ally Musharraf has stalled the formation of a government," dispatch said. But, it said, the two winning parties bear a share of responsibility.
The Nation
SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT
NEW YORK - Aides to President Pervez Musharraf believe that he would resign if ex-Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry returned to his post after the new National Assembly starts functioning, according to a dispatch in The New York Times on Wednesday.
The reason given by the unnamed presidential aides was that restoration of the chief justice would reopen the question of his eligibility to be president and the legality of his suspension of the Constitution in November.
The same would happen if lawmakers removed his powers to dissolve Parliament, The Times quoted a close aide as saying in the course of a dispatch on the latest political developments in Pakistan.
"The president will resign," the aide said. "He does not want to be an ineffective president."
An unnamed Western diplomat was quoted as saying: "He (Musharraf) is considering whether he should go. My feeling is Musharraf would not accept a diminished role; either he is in power, or he leaves."
"Yet Mr. Musharraf, who says he will work with whatever government is formed, remains aggressive publicly and seems determined to remain at the helm," The Times noted. "He continues to occupy the Army House, the government residence of the chief of army staff, in the garrison city of Rawalpindi just to the south of the capital, and continues to meet the cabinet, party officials and military officers there."
"He is under pressure, but I don't think he is going to improve," PML-N's leader Zafar-ul-Haq told The Times. "The expressions from him are such. He is adamant, stubborn."
Meanwhile, a dispatch in McClatchy group of newspapers said that the delay in naming a prime minister or a government "threatens to strengthen the man they (political parties) defeated, President Pervez Musharraf."
The dispatch said Western diplomats in Islamabad privately expressed alarm over the political vacuum, which comes as Islamic extremists are conducting a campaign of suicide bombings.
"Some Pakistani politicians contend that interference by the United States and its ally Musharraf has stalled the formation of a government," dispatch said. But, it said, the two winning parties bear a share of responsibility.
The Nation