Bhutto
to Musharraf: it's time to quit
LAHORE,
Pakistan
Petroleumworld.com
11 14 07
Former premier Benazir Bhutto urged Pakistan's
Pervez Musharraf to quit as president Tuesday as she sought to form a united
front with other opposition leaders against the military ruler.
In her most direct challenge yet to Musharraf since he declared emergency rule,
Bhutto said he was a failed leader whose time was up and vowed never to serve
under him in government.
As international anger over the crisis mounted, the United States said it was
sending Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte to Pakistan later this week
to press Musharraf to end emergency rule and hold free elections.
"First and foremost, the most important thing is for the country to return
to its democratic path," White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said.
Holed up under house arrest with close aides in Lahore as more than 1,000 police
guarded barbed wire barricades outside, Bhutto called on the world to abandon
a leader seen by many in the West as key to the "war on terror".
"It is over with Musharraf," she told AFP in an interview from inside
the residence, where she was slapped with a seven-day detention order to stop
her leading a mass procession against emergency rule.
"General Musharraf must quit... I call on the international community to
stop backing him -- to stop backing the man whose dictatorship threatens to engulf
this nuclear-armed state in chaos."
Bhutto, who had been involved in Western-backed talks with Musharraf, said his
November 3 imposition of emergency rule wrecked hopes of a power-sharing deal
despite a promise of general elections by January 9.
"I would not serve as prime minister under a man who has repeatedly broken
his promises, who is a dictator," Bhutto said.
"Look what he is giving to the nation -- imposing an emergency, suspending
the constitution and cracking down on democratic forces. We gave him a roadmap
for a peaceful transition but he has flouted that."
As Bhutto spoke, around 100 cars carrying her supporters set off from this eastern
city -- defying an official ban -- to press demands for an end to the emergency.
Authorities had banned the rally and put Bhutto under house arrest citing security
fears, as they did last Friday to prevent her leading a protest in Rawalpindi.
Double rolls of barbed wire surrounded all fours sides of the house in Lahore
where she is staying. Wooden barricades, sandbags and heavy containers added
extra layers of security.
Police arrested Bhutto supporters who tried to push through. Many shouted "Prime
Minister Benazir" as they were shoved into prison vans.
From inside the house she moved to forge a coalition of opposition parties in
an apparent bid to isolate Musharraf ahead of the elections.
She said she was ready for an alliance with another former prime minister, Nawaz
Sharif, spoke with former cricket star Imran Khan and agreed with a key Islamist
to launch a "joint struggle" against Musharraf.
"I want to build an alliance, a single point agenda for the restoration
of democracy," she told reporters.
Sharif, still in exile in Saudi Arabia, welcomed her call for Musharraf to quit
as a "positive development."
Bhutto also spoke with the leader of Pakistan's main coalition of radical Islamist
parties and to the head of a small nationalist ethnic Pashtun party, in the first
signs she could unite the country's fractious opposition.
The United States too called for talks among Pakistan's political leaders, Perino
saying "we'll have to encourage continued dialogue between all of the parties
there."
Meanwhile Pakistan's foreign ministry hit back at a Commonwealth deadline giving
Musharraf until November 22 to end the state of emergency or have the country
suspended from the 53-nation grouping.
Expressing its "deep disappointment and regret," it rejected the deadline
and "demands that are based on lack of realism and understanding."
In a separate development, Musharraf moved to allay concerns about the safety
of the nation's nuclear weapons amid the political turmoil.
"They are under total custodial controls," Musharraf told Fox News
radio, citing security measures in place since 2000, according to a transcript
of the interview released in the United States.
Story by
Rana
Jawad from AFP
AFP
131940 GMT 11 07
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