August 29, 2007
Bhutto: Musharraf to Quit As Army Chief
From CNN:
Pakistan's President, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, has agreed to step down as the country's military chief during negotiations on a power-sharing deal with Pakistan's former prime minister and opposition leader Benazir Bhutto, she told CNN Wednesday.
"This is no longer an issue in the negotiations, because General Musharraf recognizes that it is very difficult to move to a transition towards democracy when there's a chief of army staff ruling the country," Bhutto told CNN.
"I think he wants to make the right decision, so I expect he's going to take the uniform off."
Pakistani cabinet minister Sheikh Rashid confirmed that Musharraf has agreed to step down as army chief.
But it is up to Musharraf to announce his decision, Bhutto said, adding that the issue of his role as army chief is "no longer a hurdle in the negotiations that the opposition and I have been having with him."
"Earlier we had left it to the courts to decide this issue," she said, referring to Musharraf's army chief position. "But now we have bilaterally decided that this issue will be resolved."
Bhutto has previously said she is considering returning as Pakistan's prime minister under Musharraf's government if he steps down as head of Pakistan's military.
She said negotiations between her opposition party and Musharraf involve appointing a caretaker government, holding fair elections and returning to parliament powers that were removed after the 1999 coup in which Musharraf seized power.
A power-sharing deal between Bhutto and Musharraf would require Pakistan's Supreme Court to change the country's constitution to allow Musharraf to seek a third term.
More here.
Posted by Abbas Raza at 03:24 PM | Permalink






Comments
Benazir would be committing political suicide if she makes any deals of power sharing with General Musharraf. I am about as loyal a PPP supporter as there can be. I am hoping that Benazir Bhutto, for whom I have so much respect, will remain steadfast to the principles held by her late father and the PPP's manifesto.
Posted by: maniza | Aug 30, 2007 12:52:36 AM
I'm with maniza. I don't see the upside for Benazir Bhutto in this arrangement. Why doesn't she just return to Pakistan, fight the corruption charges, and make sure the country dumps Musharraf? Surprisingly, Sharif is actually showing some backbone in this matter.
Posted by: Hektor Bim | Aug 30, 2007 9:25:55 AM
America was foolish to believe they could take a military general of the enemy and make a kew and make him a leader of the same country in which he was once a general then hand him power with nukes. Dumb Dumb Dumb!!!!!
Posted by: Common Sense | Jan 15, 2008 6:35:57 AM
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