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Mandela,
Carter want emergency lifted
JOHANNESBURG—A group of former world leaders including Nelson Mandela
and Jimmy Carter has denounced Pakistan’s President Pervez Musharraf for
imposing emergency rule and suspending the constitution.
Army chief Musharraf, who took power in a 1999 coup, imposed a state of
emergency last Saturday, citing a hostile judiciary and rising militancy
in the nuclear-armed U.S. ally. “These illegal acts have resulted in
abuse and incarceration of judges, lawyers, human rights activists,
journalists and other moderate and democratic opposition forces,” the
group, called the Elders, said in a statement issued late on Thursday.
“The Elders support all those freedom-loving Pakistanis who have chosen
to join in peaceful expressions of opposition to these dictatorial acts
and call upon political leaders throughout the world to insist on a
return to a lawful government under Pakistan’s constitution,” it said.
The Elders group was formed earlier this year in an effort to use the
influence of more than a dozen Nobel laureates and former world leaders
to reduce conflict and despair around the globe.—Agencies |