Musharrafs way out

Which of the options in this article do you think this will end in?

But both those trips were dwarfed by the massive turnout in Lahore, the capital of Punjab province, which is the legal and political heartland of Pakistan.

Thus it appears the judicial crisis has the potential to turn into a nationwide challenge to the government, especially because protests in Mr Chaudhry’s favour have long since turned into a broader campaign against military rule.

For the past two months no other topic has gripped the country’s pundits, political players, scribes and chattering classes like this one.

Broadly speaking, the emerging consensus is that the president has four options.

**To ride out the crisis in the hope that the protests run out of steam. The experience of Lahore suggests that is not working.

He could simply accept that he had been wrongly advised, reinstate the chief justice, and look for a scapegoat. But many say it is too late for that now.

He could declare a state of emergency and impose martial law. That might lead to violence on the streets, and to international condemnation, including from his strategic ally the United States.

He could reach out to the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) of Benazir Bhutto, generally seen as the most popular political force in the country. According to the rumoured outlines of such a deal, corruption charges against Ms Bhutto would be dropped and she would be allowed to return from exile, if the PPP supported General Musharraf’s presidency. However, the PPP says it will not accept the president if he stays on as army chief. **

Re: Musharrafs way out

so what is the way out then? The only way out is to retire and spend rest of his life in Miami Florida and live happily everafter.

FARID

Re: Musharrafs way out

^ he won't be doing that.

I think he will end up declaring state of emergency and the ever looming martial law yet again on the unfortunate homeland.

Re: Musharrafs way out

CJ will not be re-activated by SC...so Musharraf will continue :)

Re: Musharrafs way out

Interesting article from Time magazine, commenting on the support the CJ is getting from the people, and the increasing desperation of the dictator

http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1618546,00.html

How Pakistan’s Sacked Judge Became a National Hero

During most of Pakistan’s recent political history, the country’s judiciary has always sided with its military, justifying its frequent coups against the country’s malfunctioning elected governments and endorsing the generals’ mandate to rule. So, when Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry was suspended and accused of misconduct by Pakistan’s president, Pervez Musharraf, it was widely expected that the spat would soon blow over.

Instead, however, the firing of Chaudry has turned into a political crisis for Musharraf, as massive crowds continue to demonstrate their support for the 59-year-old lawyer from Quetta. His journey last weekend from Islamabad to Lahore on the historic Grand Trunk Road, usually a four-hour drive, turned into 24-hour odyssey as tens of thousands of people clogged the 200-mile stretch of road to catch a glimpse of the man who has become the country’s most popular figure. The mood of the crowds was virulently anti-government, as protesters demanded that Musharraf step down and shouted anti-army slogans — outbursts that in Lahore’s state of Punjab, considered the heartland of Pakistan’s armed forces, must have come as a shock to its generals. In response, according to eyewitnesses and privately-owned TV channels, the government jammed the transmission of private TV channels covering the event, cut off power supply to whole neighborhoods, shut down small hotels and restaurants along the route to dissuade protesters from sticking around, and dragged empty shipping containers into the road to block Chaudhry’s way. In Islamabad, Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz reminded one reporter that the government had the constitutional right to declare a state of emergency in such situations, prompting an editorial in the respected English-language daily Dawn to scold that the government “would be well advised not to opt for an emergency declaration. It if does, the regime itself would be the loser, because it is unlikely that a declaration of emergency will be able to contain the current wave of demonstrations.”

The protests, led primarily by lawyers and judges supporting Chaudhry, are being taken as a sign that Pakistan’s judiciary is losing patience with the Musharraf government’s interference in the legal system, and that this is combining with popular anger over rising prices of basic commodities, corruption in the government and military actions in Balochistan and the tribal areas.

On Monday, Pakistan’s Supreme Court prevented the Supreme Judicial Council from hearing the government case against Chaudhry, meaning that his case will instead be heard by the full Supreme Court bench, where Chaudhry enjoys the support of the majority of judges and is more likely to prevail. The ruling prompted lawyers in offices across Pakistan to burst into cheers. “We used to have a toothlees and boneless judiciary,” says Aslam Butt, 50, a Supreme Court lawyer. “Not any more.”
For Musharraf, the coming months are critical. His terms as both President and chief of the Army expire later this year, which is also when the next general elections are due. The general depended on the judiciary’s support when he came to power in 1999, but with the courts against him, he will face a struggle to remain in power. That’s because despite having seized power in a military coup, he has relied on the legal and constitutional system to legitimate his authority, rather than simply ruling by decree. As Ismat Mehid, a lawyer in Karachi, put it: “The judiciary has always been the B team of the army. Now it doesn’t want to be the B team. It wants to become the A team of the people.”

Re: Musharrafs way out

Stepping down and retiring in Florida can be a face saving option for him ...

Re: Musharrafs way out

y florida? y not texas?

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why texas?

Re: Musharrafs way out

there are no cowboys in fl....

Re: Musharrafs way out

There is always the Saddam Husein option...

Re: Musharrafs way out

Or the C130 option as well.

Re: Musharrafs way out

So religious fundoos can do in pakistan what the degenerate rats are doing in Iraq? Pakistan ko zaroorat hai keh woh in fundooos say woh kar jo attaturk did with fundoos in turkey. tab maja aye ga.

Re: Musharrafs way out

The 'fundos' such as the MMA were never in a position of power till Mush rigged the last elections, deliberately allowing the MMA to gain so many seats

All those who would take over from Mush are against the fundos

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You must be an eastern neighbor (maja)...please read up on attatrunk and his fascist ideology and how he emulated his heroes and counterparts in Russia and Italy...

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Nah, that would be too dignified a death for someone like Mush...if you are killed by foreigners then you must have been doing something right for your nation, but if you are hanged by your own people, then the opposite is true...

Re: Musharrafs way out

In my personal opinion becuz I was present in and participated in last few elections, I think MMA performed well in attracting the vote bank. There were many instances were MMA seats were given to MQM.

Having said that, I have reservations on their political approach.