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US opposes
polls delaying steps
Foreign Desk Report
SHANNON—U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said on Friday Pakistan
must go ahead with elections next year and the United States opposed any
move by President Pervez Musharraf to impose martial law.
“I am not going to get into the details of our conversations but I think
it would be quite obvious that the United States would not be supportive
of extra-constitutional means,” said Rice, when asked whether the United
States opposed any move by Musharraf to declare martial law.
“Pakistan needs to prepare for and hold free and fair elections,” said
the top U.S. diplomat, adding that she had not spoken to Musharraf in
recent days, Rice was speaking to reporters en route to Turkey and
before a refuelling stop in Shannon, Ireland.
“The political space needs to be prepared by moderate forces, beginning
to work together, which is why we have been supportive of moderate
forces like Mrs. Bhutto’s return, and that moderate forces have a common
enemy in the extremists who are so much in evidence,” Rice said.
“We are in constant contact with the leadership and the political
leaders in Pakistan but I am not going to speculate on what might
happen,” Rice said.
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said on Friday Pakistan must go
ahead with elections next year and the United States opposed any move by
President Pervez Musharraf to impose martial law.
A suicide attack on an Air Force bus that killed eight people on
Thursday in Pakistan fuelled fresh speculation that General Musharraf
could invoke emergency powers to postpone elections, due in or around
January, which are meant to transform the country into a civilian-led
democracy.
“I am not going to get into the details of our conversations but I think
it would be quite obvious that the United States would not be supportive
of extra-constitutional means,” said Rice, when asked whether the United
States opposed any move by Musharraf to declare martial law.
“Pakistan needs to prepare for and hold free and fair elections,” said
the top U.S. diplomat, adding that she had not spoken to Musharraf in
recent days,
Rice was speaking to reporters en route to Turkey and before a
refuelling stop in Shannon, Ireland.
When speculation was rife several months ago that Musharraf was set to
declare a state of emergency, Rice called him to make clear that this
was a move Washington strongly opposed and there must be a move to
civilian rule via democratic elections.
“The political space needs to be prepared by moderate forces, beginning
to work together, which is why we have been supportive of moderate
forces like Mrs. Bhutto’s return, and that moderate forces have a common
enemy in the extremists who are so much in evidence,” Rice said.
Rice was referring to Pakistan’s former prime minister and opposition
politician Benazir Bhutto, who returned from exile to Pakistan last
month. General Musharraf granted an amnesty that allowed Bhutto to
return without fear of prosecution in graft cases hanging over her from
the 1990s.
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