Pakistan: Zardari may ask Gillani to back off



Islamabad: Jan 15

By Masror Hausen

In the brinkmanship between the government and the military, President Asif Ali Zardari might put a gag on his Prime Minister to steer the government out of murky waters, sources claim.

Already running in a survival mode, the PPP-led coalition government needs to stay in power till March 2 so that it can hold the critical Senate elections that will give it an absolute single-party majority in the upper house.

However, Monday Supreme Court issued a contempt notice to Prime Minister Gillani in the NRO validity case and a judicial panel of the apex court adjourned the hearing till Jan 25. Mansoor Ijaz told the court he would arrive in Pakistan on Jan 25. This will further mount pressure on President Zardari and Prime Minister Gillani.

In order to disarm the other opponent—the military—President Asif Ali Zardari may sacrifice Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gillani’s voice with the understanding that it will appease the military chief who has personally complained of Gillani’s allegations of taking “illegal” steps.

Senior Minister Chaudhry Pervez Elahi and Religious Affairs Minister Khurshid Shah are tipped to take the leading role, sources say on condition of anonymity

Right when the army chief General Kiyani was on an important official visit to China, Prime Minister Gillani told a Chinese news agency that General Kiyani and ISI chief Shuja Pasha’s act of submitting personal statements before the Supreme Court in the memogate case was “unconstitutional” and “illegal.”

Insiders believe the Prime Minister was told by advisors that the army chief had actually gone to Beijingto take the Chinese leadership on board on his plans to topple the government in a military coup.

On army chief’s return from Beijing, the ISPR issued a press release condemning Prime Minister’s statement to the Chinese media. “There can be no allegation more serious than what the honourable prime minister has leveled,,,This has very serious ramifications with potentially grievous consequences for the country,” it said.

Minutes after the press release went on air, Prime Minister removed the Defence Secretary Lt Gen (retd) Naeem Khalid Lodhi from his post and appointed his own confidante, Nargis Sethi, in his place. General Lodhi was close to General Kiyani.

As the Prime Minister and the military stayed on collision course, media and political pundits warned of a military coup. But the military viewed it as damaging to country’s image and a step that the Prime Minister and his government might use as a ruse to hide their ineffectual governance and alleged corruption.

Finally, as tension refused to go away, Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain is said to have jumped in to broker a meeting between the military leadership and President Zardari.

Sources inside PML-Q and PPP believe General Kiyani took up the Prime Minister’s posturing with President Zardari and demanded that Gillani clarify the statement to the Chinese media or retract it. This is officially denied by the President House.

Early Monday morning a defiant Prime Minister Gillani told reporters in Vehari, “I will not answer a person…the prime minister is answerable to parliament.”

The government sacked the former ambassador to the United States, Hussain Haqqani, on November 27 last year after a similar meeting between the civilian government and the military leadership.

Meanwhile, President Zardari has also agreed to write a letter to the Swiss authorities to ask them to re-open the money-laundering case against himself and his late wife Benazir Bhutto, sources say. This step will most likely buy the government time to hold Senate elections on March 2.

Last week Zardari had told a popular TV channel in Pakistanthat his government will not write the letter as it amounted to putting the former prime minister Benazir Bhutto’s grave to trial. Zardari also said it was not logical for any government to pursue case against its own leaders.

The letter is a bone of contention between the government and the Supreme Court. The apex court has time and again asked government authorities to re-open the money-laundering case against President Zardari and late Benazir Bhutto.
(Additional reporting by Kashif Rafique)


Pakistan: Zardari  may ask Gillani to back off
Leony Li
By The Pakistan Monitor
Published: 2012-01-16T03:11:00-08:00
Pakistan: Zardari may ask Gillani to back off
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