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PPP set to
decide on next Premier
Staff Report
ISLAMABAD—The widower of Benazir Bhutto held talks with leaders of his
Pakistan People’s Party on Monday to decide on a candidate for prime
minister after agreeing on a coalition that could force President Pervez
Musharraf from power.
Asif Ali Zardari, who became head of the PPP after Bhutto’s
assassination in December, signed an agreement on Sunday with former
prime minister Nawaz Sharif to form a coalition government. The pact
sets the scene for confrontation with U.S. ally Musharraf, particularly
as Zardari and Sharif promised to reinstate judges Musharraf dismissed
in November, just as they were expected to rule his October re-election
by legislators, while still army chief, unconstitutional.
The two leaders also agreed that the PPP should nominate a candidate for
prime minister as it won the most seats in February 18 elections, though
not enough to rule alone. Sharif’s party came second while the main pro-Musharraf
party came a poor third. Zardari had begun sounding out members-elect of
his party before deciding on a candidate, a party spokeswoman said.
“The members have reposed full confidence and given full authority to
Mr. Zardari to name the candidate for the prime minister,” Sherry Rehman,
a spokeswoman for the party, told reporters after Zardari met his party
members-elect. Consultations would continue over the next few days and
Zardari would announce the candidate after Musharraf convened the first
session of the new National Assembly, she said.
Musharraf said last week it would be a week or more before the National
Assembly was convened but Sharif and Zardari said on Sunday the session
should be called immediately. Makhdoom Amin Fahim, Zardari’s deputy and
a close aide to Bhutto, had been seen as the likely choice for prime
minister but his absence from Sunday’s talks between Zardari and Sharif
has fuelled speculation he might be out of the running.
Ahmed Mukhtar, an industrialist and commerce minister in Bhutto’s
cabinet, has emerged as another strong contender. Zardari can’t become
prime minister because he did not contest the elections and a prime
minister must be a member of parliament. But some party members want him
to stand in a by-election and go for the top job.
“We told him that it’s been a tradition that the chairperson of the
party should also be prime minister,” said a PPP member elected to the
National Assembly who met Zardari at the weekend. “We told him we will
fully support him if he becomes prime minister,” said the politician,
who declined to be identified.
Western allies and Pakistan’s neighbors, concerned about instability in
a nuclear-armed state reeling from militant suicide bombings, fear more
political upheaval in case of confrontation between the president and
the new government. Sharif, the prime minister then army chief Musharraf
ousted in a 1999 military coup, is adamant that Musharraf must step down
although Zardari has not been so outspoken.
But both of them have vowed to banish the military-led establishment
from politics and spoken of the need to scrap presidential powers to
dismiss a government. Sharif had also been insisting the judges
Musharraf dismissed be reinstated. |