Armies of Liberation

Jane Novak's blog about Yemen

Musharraf’s Uniform

Filed under: General — by Jane Novak at 11:09 am on Wednesday, December 1, 2004

Not quite implementing democracy according to the agreed timeline, Musharraf will not have a wardrobe malfunction- it will be legal.

Arab News: ISLAMABAD, 1 December 2004 — Pakistan’s Senate president signed legislation yesterday that will allow Gen. Pervez Musharraf to remain as both head of state and army chief beyond Dec. 31, a senior Cabinet minister said.

Parliament passed the legislation earlier this month. It was signed into law by Mohammed Mian Soomro, who as chairman of the Senate is Pakistan’s acting president while Musharraf is on a visit to Latin America, Information Minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed said by telephone from London.

There was no doubt that the legislation would be signed, but the timing was unusual and appeared to indicate that Musharraf did not want to put his name on it.

The general has been under fire for reneging on promises to restore full democracy, though both Washington and the Commonwealth of former British colonies have indicated a willingness to go along with his move in the interest of stability in a key ally in the war on terror.

Under the constitution, legislation passed by Parliament must be signed by the president within 30 days. Since Musharraf is away, Soomro signed the bill, which takes effect Dec. 31, to “meet a constitutional requirement,” Ahmed said.

He did not specify how long Musharraf will hold the military post. His term as president expires in 2007.

The move came two days after a coalition of six Islamic groups — who jointly hold 77 seats in the 342-seat National Assembly, the lower house of Parliament — held a large rally to kick off a campaign to force Musharraf to honor his promise to step down as army chief. They gave him until Dec. 19 to announce his retirement at the end of the year, a demand he has no plans to meet.

A coalition spokesman, Hafiz Hussain Ahmed, said the opposition “won’t accept” the legislation. “We will take it to the court of the people,” he said, while refusing to say whether they had any intention to challenge the matter legally.

Former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto’s Pakistan People’s Party said it would protest in the Senate. “We condemn and denounce this move by the acting president,” party spokesman Farhatullah Babar said.

But Ahmed, the information minister, said the time has come for the opposition to “stop the politics of confrontation” and “realize that we need political stability.”

Musharraf, a key US ally in the war on terror, seized power in a bloodless coup in 1999. He held parliamentary elections in 2002 but changed the constitution first, giving himself sweeping powers, including the right to sack the prime minister, Cabinet and Parliament.

Last year, the coalition struck a deal with Musharraf, agreeing to accept him as president until 2007 in return for his pledge to quit his army post before Dec. 31.

However, Pakistan’s ruling Muslim League-Q party passed a bill this month, clearing the way for the general to remain president and army chief until 2007.

The legislation came weeks after Musharraf said he would go back on his promise, claiming most people want him to keep his uniform to maintain stability as he fights terrorism. He also says Pakistan needs the military’s firm guiding hand to build a democratic state.

5 Comments »

1

Trackback by Diggers Realm

12/1/2004 @ 4:40 pm

Pervez Musharraf Legislation Signed Allowing Him To Remain As Army Chief And President
I reported on legislation being brought forward on Pervez Musharraf, allowing him to remain both as President and Army Chief in Pakistan back on October 14. Now it seems the legislation has been signed. Arab News Pakistan’s Senate president signed…

2

Trackback by The Command Post - Global Recon

12/1/2004 @ 4:45 pm

Pervez Musharraf Legislation Signed Allowing Him To Remain As Army Chief And President
I reported on legislation being brought forward on Pervez Musharraf, allowing him to remain both as President and Army Chief in Pakistan back on October 14. Now it seems the legislation has been signed. Arab News Pakistans Senate president…

3

Comment by jeff

12/1/2004 @ 5:28 pm

I’m not sure I want to see democracy Pakistan style. This is a country where every major city has a monument to the Islamic nuclear bomb, & a country India’s Muslims want nothing to do with

4

Trackback by ISOU

12/2/2004 @ 1:03 pm

Some Morning Reads
Mike in Iraq has a very cool program going. He is responding to kids letters to the troops. Check it out. TCF tells us why we aren’t crazy for being concerned about Election Fraud. Sadie is having ahem… Dreams, about…

5

Trackback by ISOU

12/2/2004 @ 1:03 pm

Some Morning Reads
Mike in Iraq has a very cool program going. He is responding to kids letters to the troops. Check it out. TCF tells us why we aren’t crazy for being concerned about Election Fraud. Sadie is having ahem… Dreams, about…

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