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Nawaz Sharif urges Pakistan to stop
treating India as 'biggest enemy' May 17, 2011, 01.09pm IST PTI ISLAMABAD: As Pakistan's
powerful military held out
threats to India, former
Prime Minister Nawaz
Sharif has called for
reappraisal of ties with its neighbour to move forward
and progress, saying
Islamabad must stop
treating New Delhi as its
"biggest enemy". Sharif, who was earlier
involved in talks with India when the Kargil crisis erupted, also
sought a probe into the 1999 conflict with
India. The former Prime Minister, who is the
chief of main opposition PML-N party, is
currently on a three-day visit to southern
Sindh province where he made the
remarks during an interaction with the
media in Karachi yesterday. He called on the government to also
conduct an inquiry into the 2006 killing of
Baloch leader Nawab Akbar Bugti in a
military operation and the carnage in
Karachi on May 12, 2007 that killed over
40 people who tried to rally in support of then-deposed Supreme Court Chief Justice
Iftikhar Chaudhry. Sharif, whose government was deposed
in a military coup led by former President
Pervez Musharraf in 1999, reiterated his
demand for the budgets of the military
and the ISI to be placed before
Parliament for scrutiny in line with the practice in other democracies. He said one of his biggest regrets was not
taming the powerful military when he
was Prime Minister in the 1990s.
The Parliamentary resolution calling for
an independent commission to
investigate the killing of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden in a US raid on May 2
was the first step towards making
Parliament a sovereign body, Sharif said. "We need structural changes and this
inquiry has provided an opportunity to
move forward and put the country on the
right track, correct its direction by putting
our house in order, establish the rule of
law and bring all institutions under civilian control," Sharif said. If the government fixes responsibility for
the Abbottabad incident and punishes
those found guilty, a message will go out
to the world that the people of Pakistan
will not brook another embarrassment
like the US raid, he said. Sharif spoke out against the recent
alliance forged by the ruling PPP and the
PML-Q, both of which are rivals of his PML-
N in Punjab and at the centre.
treating India as 'biggest enemy' May 17, 2011, 01.09pm IST PTI ISLAMABAD: As Pakistan's
powerful military held out
threats to India, former
Prime Minister Nawaz
Sharif has called for
reappraisal of ties with its neighbour to move forward
and progress, saying
Islamabad must stop
treating New Delhi as its
"biggest enemy". Sharif, who was earlier
involved in talks with India when the Kargil crisis erupted, also
sought a probe into the 1999 conflict with
India. The former Prime Minister, who is the
chief of main opposition PML-N party, is
currently on a three-day visit to southern
Sindh province where he made the
remarks during an interaction with the
media in Karachi yesterday. He called on the government to also
conduct an inquiry into the 2006 killing of
Baloch leader Nawab Akbar Bugti in a
military operation and the carnage in
Karachi on May 12, 2007 that killed over
40 people who tried to rally in support of then-deposed Supreme Court Chief Justice
Iftikhar Chaudhry. Sharif, whose government was deposed
in a military coup led by former President
Pervez Musharraf in 1999, reiterated his
demand for the budgets of the military
and the ISI to be placed before
Parliament for scrutiny in line with the practice in other democracies. He said one of his biggest regrets was not
taming the powerful military when he
was Prime Minister in the 1990s.
The Parliamentary resolution calling for
an independent commission to
investigate the killing of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden in a US raid on May 2
was the first step towards making
Parliament a sovereign body, Sharif said. "We need structural changes and this
inquiry has provided an opportunity to
move forward and put the country on the
right track, correct its direction by putting
our house in order, establish the rule of
law and bring all institutions under civilian control," Sharif said. If the government fixes responsibility for
the Abbottabad incident and punishes
those found guilty, a message will go out
to the world that the people of Pakistan
will not brook another embarrassment
like the US raid, he said. Sharif spoke out against the recent
alliance forged by the ruling PPP and the
PML-Q, both of which are rivals of his PML-
N in Punjab and at the centre.