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Pakistan's new balance of power

I think Musharraf should be given an honorable exit if the Politicians want him out of the equation. This bs threatening by NS and others won't do it.

Give the guy viable outs. He has done a lot for Pakistan and he deserves this much. The problem with NS is that he has his vindictiveness to contend with. Musharraf's problem is that he has two people with such personalities, NS and the CJP. As soon as the latter is re-instated, his first order of the day would be to proceed with cases against Musharraf.

If the politicians want to show maturity and lay down the path for a promising future for the Pakistani politics, then they have to let Musharraf retire with honor and give him the physical and legal security (against the terrorist and from being dragged into courts).

In the past, the Army made sure that none of its Chiefs were screwed around with once they retired or moved on, but with the judicial activism increasing in Pakistan, the Army may find itself in an awkward situation if one of its former Chiefs (Musharraf) was dragged into the courts because of Nawaz Sharif's vindictiveness.
 
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I completely agree Blain.

The gist of my post was that the restoration of the judges is a moot point. It will happen now or five years down the road, if the PPP agrees with the PML-N on it. But in order to get the country moving forward, and close this particular chapter of its history, what you said has to be done.

I suppose we can only hope that our politicians have learned something in all this time and will take pragmatic rather than confrontational steps to resolve the deadlock.
 
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Why? Are they "marching for the judiciary" or something?

My brother in law is posted there, so unfortunately you will have to "live with those Lahoris for a while":P

In Isloo parlance, "lahori" means a rather crude, Gurmukhi speaking, overweight guy friom Nawaz'sm party. Guys we just got rid of the Gujratis, and you should have seen the Balochis that Jamali brought. I swear!

Just to make a point, Isloo is a multi-cultural city, nobody of any ethnicity is unwelcome here, but nobody likes the "country cousins" who desend here from time to time. Just a bit of good old fashioned Isloo disdain. :)
 
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In Isloo parlance, "lahori" means a rather crude, Gurmukhi speaking, overweight guy friom Nawaz'sm party. Guys we just got rid of the Gujratis, and you should have seen the Balochis that Jamali brought. I swear!

Just to make a point, Isloo is a multi-cultural city, nobody of any ethnicity is unwelcome here, but nobody likes the "country cousins" who desend here from time to time. Just a bit of good old fashioned Isloo disdain. :)

You Islamabadites are a snobby bunch! :P
 
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Leaders and the Election Agenda

By Mohammad Ashraf Chaudhry
Pittsburg , CA


George Burns, the famous American comedian, once said, “Too bad all the people who know how to run the country are busy driving taxis and cutting hair”. This may not sound true anywhere in the world; but it certain does in Pakistan. The veracity of this comic statement becomes evident if one cares to listen to the election slogans that are orchestrated these days in Pakistan, just one week before the elections scheduled to be held on February 18, 2008.

Hardly any meaningful leader appears to be giving the beleaguered nation a clear vision of what he plans to do on assuming power. What people hear is a market-tested political blather; a charade of meaningless euphuism that universally befits all.

Jack and Suzy Welsh in the Business Week of February 4, 2008 clearly define the characteristics that, let us say, are most important when choosing a big company’s CEO or the next US President, or by that token, the next PM of Pakistan. They believe that the President needs the same skills as a top CEO. The Presidents need them only a little sharper. Running a country or a company, in a way is the same. They consider six characteristics as innately essential for a good CEO or an effective President.

AUTHENTICITY: If authenticity is foremost in a business CEO, it is TRUST that is equally central in a President. Be it a policy initiative or a crisis, the nation can’t be embroiled in a debate about his or her sincerity. President’s motives must enjoy total trust of the people.
CLEAR VISION: Inspirational vision is critical for real progress. A Presidential vision does not mean telling the people, “Here is where we are going?” It is about making the case for the vision and telling the nation, “Here is how our destination will make life better for our nation and for you personally”.
ABILITY TO HIRE GREAT PEOPLE: No good head of a State or a company can live without great minds surrounding him. He should have the knack to not only hire the best people, but also should be able to utilize them and challenge them for newer ideas and deeper insights. Most importantly, he must have the courage and discipline to dispatch cabinet members who fall short- whether it opens a political can of worms or not.
RESILIENCE: A great leader must have the ability to bounce back after defeat without feeling defeated. Good CEOs and great Presidents regularly get the wind knocked out of them. He must learn from his mistakes; and every failure must get him back wiser and better.
ABLE TO SEE AROUND CORNERS: Given the world we live in, the head of the State must be able to feel the shift in his fingertips. He must look around the corner by galvanizing bipartisan support.
ABLE TO EXECUTE: Most importantly, the head of the State should not be a lame-duck, a man of half-measures. It does not matter if he generates action or channels it through others. What matters is that promises are kept and plans get completed.
Election campaigns are held not just to elect the head of the state; they often illuminate, what Kenneth Walsh of US News, February 4, 2008, says “social trends and define issues, explain where America has come from and where it is headed, and generate more than their share of triumph and tragedy, and even a fair bit of comedy in between”. Such campaigns give birth to some great moments.

Was it the wetness in the eyes of Hillary Clinton at the voter forum on the eve of the New Hampshire primary that helped propel her to a come-from-behind victory? Women voters were pleasantly surprised by her vulnerability because often she is known for her steely resolve and stoicism. A touch of human weakness sometimes pays rich dividends.

A similar incident in 1972 reacted differently and destroyed Democratic candidate Ed Muskie of Main. It is still debated whether he had actually wept or just had some melted snow on his face. One thing became clear that men do not cry in public. President Ford got knocked down in 1976 elections just because of one sentence. In a timely question during the Cold War era about the relationship with the Soviet Union, he said, “There is no Soviet domination of eastern Europe….” Voters backed off, questioning Ford’s understanding of world affairs.

Reagan, the great actor, knocked down Jimmy Carter through a dramatic rebuttal on a question of Medicare with a tingle of mocking, “There you go again.”

In the 1800 elections between incumbent John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, the tone became shriller and bitter and harsher, even by today’s standards. Character assassination of Jefferson was taken to a high pitch by the Federalists, though by modern stands it still seemed somewhat genteel. Federalists charged, “Not only had Jefferson cheated British creditors, obtained property by fraud, and robbed a widow of 10,000 pounds but, if elected: murder, robbery, rape, adultery, and incest will all be openly taught and practiced,”. They also accused Jefferson, a person whose head was filled with too much of French philosophy; who just would not acknowledge any hierarchy between classes. Virtually his accusers did not stop anywhere. One of the most virulent attacks came from a 25-year-old poet whose main grievance against him was, “ Jefferson’s views on creation and Earth’s geological history made him an infidel… that he took a dehumanizing attitude toward blacks while raising the ape above its proper sphere”. Jefferson, the great president, won the elections just by ignoring these accusations.

Nixon in 1950 nullified all charges leveled against him that he personally had profited from a secret political slush fund, when in a TV debate people heard him talking less on those funds and more on his meager beginnings, and how still he was tight on finances; how still he moved about in his 1950 Oldsmobile and paid mortgages on the two houses he owned, and how regular he had been on payments on a $3,500 loan from his parents. With the memories of the great depression still fresh in the minds “people cried as they listened, even in the studio”.

HOW MUCH GREAT LEADERS CAN MATTER IN RESHAPING PEOPLE’S LIVES?

It would not be wrong to say that no President has had as great an impact on everyday life in America today as Franklin D. Roosevelt, who took office 75 years ago this spring, writes The New York Times-upfront, January 14, 2008. The minimum wage limit was introduced by him through the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938. Those who receive Social Security must feel thankful to FDR as he introduced it through the Social Security Act; if our deposits are safe in the banks up to 100,000 dollars, it is also due to him.

During the Depression, banks failed and with that vanished people’s savings. FDIC restored people’s confidence in banks. He also paved the way for an international peacekeeping organization after World War II and hence the birth of the United Nations that replaced the failed League of Nations. If roads and airports and schools have beautiful buildings it is also because of him. He created the alphabet agencies like the CWA or WPA (works progress administration) which put millions of unemployed Americans to work.

In 1797, George Washington had declined to run for a third term. All subsequent Presidents followed Washington’s precedent until Roosevelt, who ran for a third term in 1940, and in 1944 he ran again for a fourth as the war continued. People began to fear that a long presidency could become a kind of dictatorship. The 22 nd Amendment in 1947 made it a law: “No person shall be elected to the office of President more than twice”.

The power that labor unions have today is also largely the result of the National Labor Relations Act of 1935, which gave the Unions the right to organize workers and to engage in collective bargaining with employers.

President Johnson is remembered as the Education President. Students benefit every year through the reforms he introduced. George Washington placed the civilian President as head of the army and blocked the way to military take-over; honest Abraham Lincoln abolished slavery; Kennedy ended segregation and strengthened civil rights. American Presidents have left behind rich legacies. What did Pakistani politicians leave behind? … a gradual trail of disorder and chaos.

WHAT DO POLITICIANS IN PAKISTAN SAY IN ELECTION CAMPAIGNS?

“Politics is like a form of worship to us”, opines Asif Ali Zardari. The slogan is also echoed by Mian Nawaz Sharif. “Nawaz Sharif should repent three times and vow publicly before he contends in the elections that he would not run away”, says Pervez Ilahi. The tenacity and the ability of the Chaudhrys of Gujrat is a proven fact when it comes to staying in power.

“It is possible to negotiate with Musharraf; but he must first account for his performance”, retorts Mian Nawaz Sharif. Syed Sajjad Ali Shah, ex-chief justice enjoins by saying, “The current crisis of the judges and courts is the creation of Mian Nawaz Sharif”.

The words of London based peer of Karachi politics need special attention, “MQM has its genesis in poverty, and is an enemy of feudalism”. Brain-washing and blind obedience are the two traits of feudalism. Is his brand of politics any different? He has created a new cult in politics in his effort to destroy another.

The President, Pervez Musharraf, lately has also intoned on the topic. “The deposed judges would not be restored in any circumstances”. He is right because the current crisis emanates from that action of his, and continuity of it is the main thing.

“We will abrogate the national reconciliation ordnance with the PPP once we assume power”, says the hopeful for the seat of the prime minister, Mr. Pervez Elahi. The question is since when the Chaudhrys were out of power? Not that I know of in my 50 years of understanding of Pakistani politics.

“I am the only the PM…” Mian Nawaz Sharif often begins his statements with this phrase. My past articles tell me that he squandered away his two-term premiership, (1990-1993, and 1997-1999) by horn-locking himself with Ms. Benazir; chief justice; army chiefs and the president. His attempt to liberalize the economy resulted in cronyism which prospered through the shady deals of 1991; law and order remained as bad if not worse as is today; Pakistan came to be put on the State Department’s watch list for terrorist states, and it did stun the people of Pakistan. His landslide victory in the 1997 elections became a hay-day for the current defectors. He could not announce his cabinet even after one month of his taking of the oath. Sheikh Rashid and Ejaz Ul Haque and Chaudhry Shujaat contended fiercely for powerful portfolios, and finally got what each wanted.

Mian Sahib’s confusion is obvious than ever before. He wants to contest the elections, but on his terms. “Musharraf must resign, and the Senate chairman should form a consensus government after consulting with all the politicians”. Did he not learn anything from his London conference experience?

“People should boycott the elections”, is the stand of Qazi Hussain Ahmad. And the assemblage of several hundred retired generals, admirals and air marshals in Islamabad has confirmed one thing. No one in Pakistan repents for his past mistakes. The cardinal point of their agenda: no talks about the past; only the future will be discussed, and it mainly remained ineffective because they all had a share in the mess that Pakistan is in.

Where is the vision; the program; the agenda, and the grandeur of the Quaid which these leaders can be heard promising to the people if elected. Seven years spent outside Pakistan or eleven years in prison are no qualifications for being in the seat of the prime minister. And such credentials hardly offer any solution to the social and economic problems confronting people. Asif Ali Zardari is right when he says, “The future of PPP will determine the future of Pakistan”. At least his designs are naked.

The political blather orchestrated by other contenders is as vague as ever. No political or religious party has the audacity to come forward with one agenda, which is: terrorists have no place in Pakistan. The extremists are blowing off the houses and are eliminating those who show intention to contest the elections. They want a clear passage to power, which appears to be becoming a possibility the way these future leaders-in-power are seen engaged in meaningless bickering. As the Time of June 25, 2007 wrote, “In 2000 Bush ran without knowing the name of the President of Pakistan. The next President will have to known everything about Waziristan”. In the year 2008, both Hillary Clinton and McCain and Obama know more about what is happening in Pakistan than these leaders of ours.
 
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Forming Pakistan's government step by step

REUTERS - The leaders of Pakistan's two main parties are trying to forge a coalition government following their resounding election victory over allies of President Pervez Musharraf.

If they succeed, it will be the first time the two main parties in Pakistan have come together.

Analysts say their alliance could result in Musharraf being driven from office for violating the constitution when he declared emergency rule in November and purged the Supreme Court of judges who could have annulled his own re-election a month earlier.

Since the election, Musharraf has said he was not ready to resign.

The Pakistan People's Party (PPP), which won the largest number of seats in the National Assembly without getting a majority, will nominate the next prime minister.

The PPP was led into the election by Asif Ali Zardari, following the assassination of his wife, former prime minister Benazir Bhutto. Zardari did not stand for election, and has said he does not intend to become prime minister.

The Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) led by Nawaz Sharif, the prime minister General Musharraf overthrew in 1999, secured the second largest number of seats. Sharif's party is known as PML-N, or the Nawaz League.

Sharif, who returned from exile in November, a month after Bhutto, was barred from contesting the election.

Zardari and Sharif agreed on Thursday to work together to form a government of national consensus, but one excluding the pro-Musharraf Pakistan Muslim League (PML).

Here are the steps entailed in forming a government in Pakistan:

-- The Election Commission should announce official results of the elections within 14 days of polling. The commission is expected to declare the results by March 1.

-- The president calls the inaugural session of the National Assembly, parliament's lower house, after the official results are announced, but how soon after depends on whether there is a government ready. In 2002, Musharraf convened the assembly session more than a month after the election, to give time to political parties to agree on a coalition.

-- The president invites a member of the National Assembly who commands the confidence of the majority of the members to become prime minister and form the government. Before the election of the prime minister, the newly elected members are sworn in, and they elect a speaker of the house and his deputy.
 
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PPPP endorses Fahim, says NA to decide on judges

* PPPP MNAs vow end to presidential powers to dismiss assemblies
* Fahim says he declined earlier offers to become governor, PM

By Zulfiqar Ghuman

ISLAMABAD: Elected members from the Pakistan People’s Party Parliamentarians (PPPP) decided on Friday that Makhdoom Amin Fahim would be their candidate for prime minister and the National Assembly (NA) would decide the fate of the judges sacked on November 3, party sources said.

In a meeting at the Zardari House in Islamabad, they also vowed an end to the presidential powers to dismiss assemblies, a PPP press release said.

The party decided to address the removal of judges by President Pervez Musharraf on November 3 through a resolution in the NA. The resolution, they said, would give complete financial and administrative independence to the judiciary.

Amin Fahim: Amin Fahim told the meeting that General Ziaul Haq had offered to make him the governor of Punjab and President Pervez Musharraf had offered him the seat of prime minister, but he rejected the offers because of his commitment to democracy.

Zardari briefed the meeting on his contacts with other political parties to form a government of national consensus.

Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz Finance Secretary Pervaiz Malik told Daily Times that his party would not accept anything short of the restoration of the sacked judges.

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
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Yeah with IND judiciary and IND media.

Plus a collation of diff political parties will create a good balance of power
 
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PPP dose not have a majority in the Senate. How many times has this been repeated.
 
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Pakistan's two biggest parties should ally - poll

By David Fox

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - An opinion poll on Saturday showed an alliance between the two biggest groups opposed to President Pervez Musharraf was the preferred choice of Pakistan's voters.

Monday's election left none of Pakistan's parties with a majority in the National Assembly and negotiations are continuing between rivals keen to forge a coalition big enough to hold power in the 342-seat parliament.

The fate of Musharraf, who seized power in a military coup in October 1999 and is a key U.S. ally in its war on terror, could depend on what kind of coalition emerges. His supporters, with 39 seats, could still have a say.

Provisional results have been announced for all but 10 seats and the Pakistan People's Party (PPP) leads with 87 followed by the Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz), otherwise known as the PML-N or Nawaz League, with 67.

The Gallup poll suggested an alliance between these two was the preferred choice of supporters. Forty percent of PPP voters said the PML-N was their second choice and 45 percent vice versa.

Some 35 percent of PPP voters and 25 percent of PML-N voters declined to give a second preference in the poll, held on the day of the election. Gallup did not say how big its sample was.

For much of last year an alliance between the PPP and PML-N seemed unlikely.

The PPP was headed by former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, until she was assassinated on Dec. 27 when leaving a rally, and a deal with Musharraf over her return from years of exile looked likely to extend into a political alliance.

Under that scenario the PML-N party led by Nawaz Sharif, the prime minister deposed and exiled by Musharraf after a coup in 1999, looked likely to be the main opposition bloc.

In the aftermath of Bhutto's assassination and Monday's election, a PPP/PML-N alliance now looks like "the impossible has come to pass", as Dawn newspaper described it in an editorial on Saturday.

If they forge a coalition, it will be the first time in Pakistan's history the two main parties have come together.

In one early sign of cooperation -- and one that spells trouble for Musharraf -- the PPP and PML-N have agreed in principle to restore judges Musharraf fired when he imposed emergency rule in November.

The judges, if reinstated, can be expected to take up the question of the eligibility of Musharraf to stand for re-election as president while still army chief in October. They had been expected to rule against Musharraf when he imposed the emergency.

On Saturday party elders from across the political divide were meeting separately and with their party faithful to decide the next steps.

The Election Commission is expected to issue official results by March 1, after which Musharraf is expected to convene an inaugural session of the National Assembly.

When that is may depend on whether there is a government-in-waiting because the president has to invite the member commanding the confidence of the majority to become prime minister.
 
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Pakistan coalition promises benefits

Ahmed Rashid, guest columnist and writer on Pakistan, sees signs for optimism at the prospect of a coalition government in Pakistan after Monday's elections.

The decision by Asif Zardari and Nawaz Sharif to work towards a coalition government could prove a major step forward in lifting Pakistan out of its political morass and putting it back on the rails.

The new alliance is between the Pakistan People's Party - the left-of-centre group that won the largest number of parliamentary seats in the 18 February elections and is now led by the widower of assassinated Benazir Bhutto - and the Pakistan Muslim League-N group, led by Mr Sharif which came in a close second.

However, the proposed coalition government could have to face continuing behind the scenes efforts by President Pervez Musharraf and the intelligence agencies to undermine them even before they are allowed to govern.

Mr Musharraf's agents, backed by a section of the Washington establishment, is reported to have been secretly trying to persuade Mr Zardari to go into alliance with the former ruling party - the Pakistan Muslim League-Q group.


'Hugely positive'

The PML-Q has been decimated in the elections - 23 ministers lost their seats and today it is leaderless, visionless and without an agenda - except to continue supporting Mr Musharraf.

The proposed new coalition could prove hugely positive for Pakistan's four provinces.

In the North Western Frontier Province that has been torn apart by civil war, the majority of seats have been won by a PPP ally, the Awami National Party (ANP).

The ANP has perhaps some of the most seasoned and battle-hardened politicians in the country - a pedigree that goes back to the 1930s.

It has tried, despite blockages put up by Mr Musharraf, to foster a more modern and moderate image of Pashtun nationalism than the one put up by the Pakistani Taleban and al-Qaeda. Now it will have every chance of success.

In Sindh province that has previously been torn apart by the bloodshed perpetrated by the Sindhis represented by the PPP and the Urdu speaking Mohajirs represented by the MQM, there is now an offer by Mr Zardari for both parties to form a coalition government.


That would be hugely welcomed by the people of Karachi and other urban centres in the province who have often borne the brunt of past violence.

In Balochistan, Mr Zardari has promised to talk to the Baloch nationalist leaders, all of whom boycotted the elections. The nationalists and separatists are leading a guerrilla war in the province against the army and Mr Musharraf refused to hold any dialogue with them. So far they have not responded to Mr Zardari's offer.

Punjab, the country's largest and most important province would be most likely ruled by Mr Sharif's PML-N because it has the largest number of seats in its assembly. But if there is co-operation at the national level, there is unlikely to be any major rift between the PPP and the PML-N as there was in the late 1980s, when one rival party ruled the centre and the other ruled Punjab.

So for the first in more than a decade the country could be ruled collectively by parties who have separate strengths in each province and who agree on a minimum agenda to fight terrorism, reduce inflation, get the army out of politics and strengthen civilian institutions like the judiciary.


Backburner

Mr Sharif had been demanding an immediate reinstatement of those judges sacked and jailed by Mr Musharraf. But he seems to have watered down his appeals in the light of advice from Mr Zardari, who perhaps has the same goals but wants to go about it more slowly.

Mr Zardari does not immediately want to annoy the army and those around Mr Musharraf. Nor has Mr Zardari endorsed Mr Sharif's earlier call to impeach Mr Musharraf. That too is likely to be put on the backburner.

What is likely to emerge is that Mr Musharraf himself will be nudged backwards into a much weaker role as new army chief Gen Ashfaq Kayani forms a new relationship with the country's civilian leadership and assures them that the army will not be used to undermine them.

That would cut away Mr Musharraf's powers and his chances of continuing to dominate the political spectrum.

All this may come as a blow to President George W Bush who appears to trust no Pakistani in office except for Mr Musharraf.

However there are now signs of a new school of thought brewing in the state and defence departments that goes against Mr Bush's views, which are heavily influenced by Vice President Dick Cheney.

The State Department under Condoleezza Rice has not dared to even discuss a new Pakistan policy in the past, because of fears of angering the White House. Now it seems just such a process is underway, following the massive defeats of Mr Musharraf's supporters at the polls.


Taleban crackdown?

Washington should also consider the degree to which the new government is likely to be strongly welcomed in the region.

President Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan will be hoping to see a real crackdown on the Taleban leadership that have been given sanctuary in Pakistan and he knows and has a good relationship with many of the new leaders in the PPP, the ANP and the PML-N.

India will be hoping to see greater progress in confidence-building measures between the two states that could help start a dialogue on resolving the Kashmir dispute.

Iran will be less apprehensive that Pakistan may do a deal under the table with the Americans to help subvert Iran.

Russia, China and the five Central Asian states are likely to support the new process in the hope that it will bring stability and end the army's on-off support for Islamic militancy which has allowed Islamic militants from their countries to set up shop in Pakistan's tribal areas.

There is plenty of reason to argue that Pakistan has benefited hugely from the elections.

Much will now depend on how willing Mr Musharraf is to accept defeat gracefully.

Ahmed Rashid is a Pakistani journalist based in Lahore. He is the author of three books including Taliban and, most recently, Jihad. He has covered Pakistan, Afghanistan and Central Asia for the past 25 years.
 
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Pakistan's coalition builders leave Musharraf isolated

By Zeeshan Haider

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Pakistan's opposition election winners were trying to forge a coalition on Friday, raising the prospect of a government intent on forcing U.S. ally President Pervez Musharraf from power.

Leaders of the two parties that won the election, the Pakistan People's Party (PPP) and the Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz), or PML-N, vowed on Thursday to work together to form a government but said they still had details to work out.

The main party backing the unpopular Musharraf was dealt a stunning defeat in Monday's general election, leaving the president, one of Washington's top Muslim allies against al Qaeda, vulnerable to a hostile parliament.

"I don't see any problems in them forming a coalition," said political analyst and academic Rasul Baksh Rais.

"They have realised that by working together they can put Pakistan back on a democratic line."

Nawaz Sharif, the prime minister Musharraf overthrew in 1999 and whose PML-N came second in the vote, has demanded the unpopular president step down. But since the election, Musharraf has said he was not ready to resign.

U.S. President George W. Bush's administration has urged the next government to work with Musharraf and says Washington needs Pakistan -- which borders Afghanistan where U.S. and NATO forces are fighting Islamist militants -- as an ally.

Sharif met Asif Ali Zardari, former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto's widower and leader of her PPP since her murder on Dec. 27, in Islamabad on Thursday evening for their first face-to-face talks since the election.

If they forge a coalition, it will be the first time in Pakistan's history the two main parties have come together. Musharraf's 1999 coup ended a chaotic decade of civilian rule alternating between Bhutto and Sharif governments.

Zardari met the PPP's winning candidates, and a party statement said more consultative meetings were expected over the next three days.

Zardari and Sharif also separately met with leaders of the Awami National Party, a Pashtun nationalist party set to join them in a coalition after sweeping Islamists out of power in North West Frontier Province.

The Election Commission is expected to issue official results on March 1.

Musharraf should then convene an inaugural session of the National Assembly. But how soon after may depend on whether there is a government-in-waiting, as the president has to invite a member commanding the confidence of the majority to become prime minister.


SHARE SENTIMENT POSITIVE

Sharif told a news conference after his meeting with Zardari that the two parties would work together to form a government.

Zardari, whose party won the most seats but not an overall majority, said he wanted a broad government but one excluding the main party that backs Musharraf.

He said the PPP and Sharif's party would "stay together" but they had lots of details to work out.

"We have a lot of modalities to cover. We have a lot of ground to cover," he said. "We will be meeting off and on. In principle, we have agreed to stay together."

Sharif's party had yet to decide whether to join a PPP-led government or support it without being part of it.

"Either is possible. It is being worked out," said party chairman Raja Zafar-ul-Haq.

In another sign of looming trouble for Musharraf, Sharif said he and Zardari had agreed in principle to restore judges Musharraf fired when he imposed emergency rule in November.

The judges, if reinstated, can be expected to take up the question of the eligibility of Musharraf to stand for re-election as president while still army chief last October. They were expected to rule against Musharraf when he imposed the emergency.

The Karachi Stock Exchange 100 share index closed virtually flat, but a tiny 0.06 percent rise was enough to notch a record closing high for a third consecutive day.

The index has risen 4.37 percent this week largely due to relief the elections were less violent and fairer than most people anticipated. Dealers said sentiment was still positive and investors were looking forward to a new coalition.

Karachi is the only share market in Asia to have gained this year, up 6.3 percent. Its gains over the past 12 months are ranked behind only China and Indonesia, though many investors still consider it a difficult and illiquid market.

The index has risen about 900 percent since 2000.
 
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‘No impeachment of Musharraf’

PPPP doesn’t want to rock the boat: Fahim

* PPPP leader says country must have transition of power from military to civilians

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan People’s Party Parliamentarians (PPPP) on Saturday indicated that the new government would not seek President Pervez Musharraf’s immediate impeachment as western envoys have urged winning parties to support him.

PPPP candidate for premiership Amin Fahim told CNN that the party didn’t wish “to rock the boat” now.

“I think there’s no need at the moment (to impeach Musharraf) but parliament is sovereign. Once we go to parliament, it will look at every issue. We should not rock the boat at this time. We must have a civil transition of power from military to civilians,” he said.

A PPPP meeting of elected members on Friday endorsed Fahim as the party’s candidate for the premiership. The meeting, which was held at Zardari House in Islamabad, said that it would end the presidential powers to dismiss assemblies.

White House Press Secretary Dana Perino has said that it was “up to the Pakistani people to decide whether Musharraf retains his position”. According to the Pakistani Foreign Office, US President George W Bush called President Pervez Musharraf on Thursday to congratulate him on peaceful elections and reaffirm that the US would work closely with the new government.

Also, President Musharraf vowed in a US newspaper opinion piece published on Friday to work with the new parliament after winning parties agreed to form a coalition government.

Diplomats, including from the United States and the United Kingdom, had pressed the Pakistan People’s Party and the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) to try to co-exist with Musharraf, a key ally in the war on terror, for some time “to ensure a smooth transition and stability in the country”, sources said.

US Ambassador Anne Patterson has met PPP Co-chairman Asif Ali Zardari at least twice since his party emerged as winning party in the February 18 polls. British High Commissioner Robert Brinkley has also met leaders of the PPP and the PML-N. The US has said that it would continue working with Musharraf despite defeat of his loyalists in the elections.

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
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