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Benazir
refuses to delay return
ISLAMABAD—The party of former premier Benazir Bhutto rejected a call
Thursday from the president to delay her return from exile, insisting
she would land in Pakistan as planned next week to campaign for January
elections. Bhutto, who went into self-imposed exile in 1999 to escape
corruption charges, plans a grand homecoming Oct. 18. After months of
power-sharing talks, President Gen. Pervez Musharraf last week enacted
an amnesty quashing cases against her and other politicians.
But Wednesday, Musharraf urged Bhutto to postpone her return to Pakistan
until after the Supreme Court rules on his own eligibility for a new
five-year presidential term. The court is due to resume hearings on Oct.
17, a day before Bhutto is scheduled to land in Karachi. Farhatullah
Babar, a spokesman for Bhutto’s Pakistan People’s Party, said the
two-time prime minister was sticking to her plans. She “will come on
Oct. 18 as scheduled,” Babar told.
He denied a report in the respected Dawn daily that Bhutto would discuss
a possible delay with senior aides on Thursday. He confirmed the meeting
was taking place in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, but said a postponement
was not on the agenda. Musharraf, who seized power in a 1999 coup, swept
a presidential election by lawmakers last weekend, but faces at least a
week of political limbo until the court decides whether he can take up
office. If the court rules in his favor, he has promised to relinquish
his command of the army.
Opponents argue that Musharraf should have been disqualified from
running under a constitutional bar on public servants — including army
officers — seeking elected office. Bhutto and Musharraf are eyeing a
possible alliance if her party fares well in the parliamentary election,
which will be held in January. Although longtime rivals, Bhutto and
Musharraf both are pro-American and have called for moderate forces to
reverse a resurgence of Taliban and al-Qaida militants along the Afghan
border.
Violence linked to growing Islamic militancy in Pakistan has killed more
than 1,000 people in a little over three months, fanning opposition to
the country’s close alliance with the United States. On Thursday, a
prominent tribal elder accused Pakistan’s army of killing dozens of
civilians this week in fierce fighting near the Afghan border. At least
50 people were killed Tuesday when jets and helicopter gunships targeted
suspected militant positions in Epi village in North Waziristan, pushing
the death toll in fighting since the weekend to 250. Witnesses said the
village bazaar was bombed. “We know that the army killed 55 innocent
people, and they included women and children,” Maulana Nek Zaman, a
local lawmaker for the hardline party Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam, told the AP.
“We know it because we buried them.” Maj. Gen. Waheed Arshad, an army
spokesman, said there were reports of civilian casualties, but did not
say how many.
He blamed militants for opening fire on security forces from villagers’
dwellings. He said the estimated 200 dead militants included about 50
foreigners, including 25 Uzbeks, some Arabs, Afghans and Tajik fighters.
Adding to the current political uncertainty, the party of another exiled
former prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, threatened Thursday to boycott the
parliamentary vote, claiming the current election commissioner was
biased toward the government.—Agencies |