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Old Monday, August 11, 2008
Bushra Saleem Bushra Saleem is offline
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Default Impeachment & Resignation of Mushraf

Pakistan's governing coalition leaders have been meeting to finalise a plan to impeach President Pervez Musharraf.

They accuse him of misconduct and of violating the constitution, and have urged him to resign.

A presidential spokesman said he would not do so. Mr Musharraf has been meeting advisers to plot his next move.

Pakistan's National Assembly is convening on Monday. Observers say it could be several days before it hears the charges against Mr Musharraf.

The provincial assembly in Punjab also passed a resolution on Monday demanding the president's resignation.

'False'

Leaders of the two largest parties in government met over the weekend to put the finishing touches to what those charges will be.

"The work of the impeachment committee is almost complete. It is giving finishing touches to the charge sheet," said Farzana Raja of the main party in government, the Pakistan People's Party (PPP).

"We gave him [Mr Musharraf] a chance to resign, we gave him a few months. But we have now come to the conclusion that now the people of Pakistan, through their elected representatives in the parliament, will have to do that."


One official said that the list of violations of the constitution and examples of the president's misconduct would extend to more than 100 pages.

Presidential spokesman Rashid Qureshi said there was no reason for Mr Musharraf to resign.

"Everything they are saying is false, so why should he resign?" he told the AFP news agency.

The charges are not likely to be presented to parliament until after independence celebrations on Thursday.

Before then the government is getting the four provincial assemblies to hold their own votes - which will ask the president to seek a vote of confidence.

The BBC's Mark Dummett in Islamabad says this will not have any direct bearing on the impeachment process - but will encourage more politicians to call for the president's resignation.

The government insists that it has enough votes to impeach him, but party leaders say he should resign now to avoid humiliation.

Mr Musharraf's supporters say they can muster enough votes to prevent his opponents from gaining a two-thirds majority required in both houses of parliament.

Our correspondent says Mr Musharraf has three options ahead of him

he could contest the impeachment in parliament, which is what his supporters there are urging him to do,
he could resign,
or he could take a huge risk, dismiss the government and dissolve parliament.
To do that would need the backing of the army, but there has been no indication yet of where Pakistan's most powerful institution stands, our correspondent says.



http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7553206.stm


The whole nation is haunted by euphoria of the impeachment of the most cruel dictator.This indeed will herald a new dawn of democracy.His impeachment will end horse trading, bring political stability, end politics of conspiracies, terrorist attacks by the militants, corruotion, subversion of the constitution, nepotism, hostility with foreign countries and many other ills.It indeed is a good omen for public administration as the chief patron of the corrupt nazims will quit and thus they will leave the scene paving the way for smooth administration.
In my opinion, he should not only be impeached but also tried for the charges of;
1.human rights violation
2.selling out our own nationals to the US
3.Corruption by himself and his cronies
4weakening the federation
5.disturbances in baluchistan and fata and the killing of Akbar Bukti
6.Subversion of the constitution twice.
7.distruction of the institutions.
8.assault on Judiciary
9.Economic irregularities
10.victimization of political opponents
and many more...

Last edited by Sureshlasi; Sunday, August 17, 2008 at 04:31 AM.
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