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Polls victory in war on terror, says Bush
Foreign Desk Report
ACCRA (Ghana)—President Bush said Wednesday that he hoped the sweeping
defeat of Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf’s party in parliamentary
elections won’t end the Islamic nation’s cooperation in fighting radical
extremists.
Musharraf was not on the ballot, but the election was widely seen as a
referendum on his eight-year rule — including his alliance with the
United States in the war against terrorist groups that many Pakistanis
oppose. The pro-Musharraf party lost badly, and conceded defeat before
the final tally.
“It’s now time for the newly elected folks to show up and form their
government,” Bush said during a news conference in Ghana, the fourth of
five nations he’s visiting in Africa. “The question then is `Will they
be friends of the United States?’ I certainly hope so.”
But with the ballot count nearly complete, the parties of slain former
Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif —
the leader Musharraf ousted — had won enough seats to form a new
government. They were expected, though, to fall short of the two-thirds
needed to impeach Musharraf.
Bhutto, a two-time former prime minister, died in a shooting and suicide
bombing as she waved to supporters from her car following a campaign
rally on Dec. 27.
“We need Pakistan as an important ally.” Bush said. “We’ve got common
interests. We’ve got interests in dealing with radicals who killed
Benazir Bhutto. We’ve got interests in helping make sure there’s no safe
haven from which people can plot and plan attacks against the United
States of America and Pakistan.”
Bush did not comment specifically on the political future of Musharraf,
who has said he will not step down as head of state and intends to serve
out his five-year-term, which expires in 2012. Bush said he was pleased
that Musharraf had followed through on his promise to end emergency rule
and hold free elections. “There were elections held that have been
judged as being fair, and the people have spoken,” Bush said. “I view
that as a significant victory. I view it as part of the victory on the
war on terror. After all, the ideologues can’t stand ... free societies
— that’s why they try to kill innocent people. That’s why they tried to
intimidate people during the election process”.
. US Senator John McCain, the Republican Party presidential hopeful, has
rejected calls for the resignation of President Pervez Musharraf
following Monday’s elections, saying he is a “legitimately elected”
Pakistani leader.
“I think he’s a legitimately elected president, and we’ll see what the
dynamic of the new parliament is,” said McCain, who is on a campaign
swing across the United States for the party nomination that is nearly
in his bagged. During campaign stops in the states of Wisconsin and Ohio
on Tuesday, Sen. McCain was asked by reporters for his comments on the
outcome of Pakistan’s election in which opposition political parties
scored major gains.
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