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Pressure mounts on Pakistan's Zardari to quit

ISLAMABAD
Thu Dec 17, 2009 4:42pm EST

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Pressure mounted on Thursday for Pakistan's President Asif Ali Zardari to resign after a court struck down an amnesty protecting him and other politicians from possible prosecution for corruption.

World  |  Barack Obama

The prospect of political turmoil comes as the United States increases calls on Pakistan to tackle Afghan Taliban in lawless border enclaves, where Pakistani security agents said suspected U.S. drones attacked on Thursday, killing 12 fighters.

The Supreme Court threw out on Wednesday the 2007 amnesty that protected Zardari and top aides from graft charges, heaping pressure on the unpopular pro-American leader, even though he is still shielded by presidential immunity.

The ruling means all old cases covered by the amnesty, most of them corruption cases, have been revived. It also asked the government to seek the revival of cases lodged in foreign countries.

The United States is struggling to stabilize Afghanistan and needs Pakistani action against militants in its northwest, and will be dismayed if political turmoil absorbs the government's attention.

Immediately after the Wednesday evening court ruling, Zardari's spokesmen said the president's ruling Pakistan People's Party (PPP) respected the decision but there was no question of the president resigning.

However, a senior leader of the main opposition party said Zardari should do the right thing and step down.

"He should quit this office in his own interest as well as in the interest of his party and the system. He can get any member of his party elected to the post," said Khawaja Mohammad Asif of the Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) party.

"He will achieve the high moral ground," he said.

Stock investors have been unnerved by both political uncertainty and militant violence and the main index ended 0.29 percent down at 9,227.18 in thin turnover.

Some legal experts say the danger for the president is that the legitimacy of his 2008 election as president could be challenged now that old cases against him have been revived.

Among those protected by the amnesty were the interior and defense ministers and several of Zardari's top aides.

If they departed from government it would not have a significant impact on Pakistan's war on militancy, which is led by the army.

DRONE STRIKE

Pakistani security officials said suspected U.S. drone aircraft fired seven missiles at militants in the North Waziristan region, killing 12 fighters.

"Seven missiles were fired. They hit a cave complex, a compound and a vehicle," said one of the Pakistani officials, who declined to be identified.

There was no information about the identity of those killed but North Waziristan is a sanctuary for an Afghan Taliban faction led by veteran militant commander Jalaluddin Haqqani, and for al Qaeda fighters.

The United States has launched 48 drone strikes this year, killing more than 400 people, most of them militants, according to a Reuters tally. There were 32 such strikes last year which killed about 240 people.

Though attacking its homegrown Taliban behind a wave of bomb attacks, Pakistan is resisting U.S. pressure to crack down on Afghan Taliban militants, who could provide it with leverage against the growing influence of old rival India in Afghanistan.

President Barack Obama has made clear Washington had other options if Pakistan did not cooperate in fighting Afghan Taliban.

Those options include increased drone attacks.

TARNISHED IMAGE

In Islamabad, a spokesman for the government's anti-graft agency said arrest warrants against some people had been revived and some people had had their assets frozen.

About 248 people had also been barred from leaving the country, said agency spokesman Ghazni Khan. He gave no names.

The amnesty was introduced by former president Pervez Musharraf as part of a power-sharing deal brokered with Zardari's late wife, former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, with U.S. and British encouragement.

Bhutto returned to Pakistan from self-imposed exile soon after the amnesty was introduced, but was assassinated weeks later while campaigning for a general election she hoped to win.

Instead, Zardari led her party to victory in the February 2008 polls and became president after Musharraf stepped down later that year.

But Zardari's image has long been tarnished by allegedly shady deals during Bhutto's two terms as prime minister in the 1990s.

Zardari says the charges were politically motivated. He has never been convicted but nevertheless spent 11 years in jail.

In another ominous development for the president, the Supreme Court ordered the government to inform Swiss authorities a case against him there may be reopened.

Swiss judicial authorities said in August 2008 they had closed a money-laundering case against Zardari and had released $60 million frozen in Swiss accounts for a decade, soon after Pakistan dropped out of all cases it had initiated there.

(Writing by Robert Birsel; Editing by Jerry Norton)

(For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

Comments

Dec 17, 2009 12:26pm EST

hhgghggkkkkkkkkk

The cap on cash makes the whole thing quite understandable including the prices of essentials……

is this going to chng the ecconomy in terms of exports or imports……

basic cost like cotton should indicate that 29 years of reseacr in roubles ecconomy….
salil.

screuwee Report As Abusive
 
 
Dec 17, 2009 12:36pm EST

Until corruption is controlled within the Pakistani government, it cannot possibly hope to remove the threat of Taliban dominance in Pakistan. If the country is to recover from this attack it needs strong leadership from people who resist corruption, have a good strategy and an indomitable desire to see terrorism totally extinguished. Where does one find people like that?

Sorcaress Report As Abusive
 
 
Dec 17, 2009 1:17pm EST

My girlfriend and I are wondering what’s wrong with these man? By the way, you guys can’t believe that I am eight years older than her. We met online at ~ageromance.com ~a free place~~ maybe you wanna check out or tell your friends. Ha ha~~~

jacots Report As Abusive
 
 
Dec 17, 2009 1:38pm EST

Nuke’em all indeed.That’s the only hope left for this most corrupt Govt. and its military,because of which eradicating terrorism has become such a difficult task.

kuku1 Report As Abusive
 
 
Dec 17, 2009 1:58pm EST

hey oraclemumbai you wannabe pseudo american, if anyone Nukes Pakistan, Pakistan will shove 150 Nukes up Indias behind. Dont pretend to be a Westerner, no amount of sucking white a$$ will improve your black dead mud skin.

mildbrew Report As Abusive
 
 
Dec 17, 2009 2:02pm EST

This is a great day for Pakistan, from India to America, no court has ever taken on corrupt government officials, the supposed largest democracy India never had the guts to take on its leaders and a rebellion simultaneously while aiming its guns squarely at a nation 4 times bigger. Pakistanis have a lot of guts and that is why being such a small country it takes on a giant India and thrashes it, India can only dare mess with its smaller neighbours, this is why they all hate India, India is afraid of giants like China. India as a nation is made of pygmies and hyenas who only prey on smaller weaker prey in packs and avoid larger animals their own size, what a pathetic nation, it will never be a superpower, the genes are inferior and very very ugly inside and out.

mildbrew Report As Abusive
 
 
Dec 17, 2009 2:10pm EST

well said mildbrew!
@oraclemumbai and kuku: if india stops exporting/infesting terrorists into Pakistan..either through their border or through Afghanistan.. Pakistan will be much better thn India :) As far nuking them goes, you’ll be the first ones to take their nukes into your behind. Don’t forget, China is already with Pakistan and you were badly beaten by China in 1962. If China and Pakistan combines, they can remove India from the map of this world!

DougJackson Report As Abusive
 
 
Dec 17, 2009 2:15pm EST

India can only thrash or control small countries like Nepal, SriLanka, Bhutan.. they’d never dare mess with Pakistan or China.

DougJackson Report As Abusive
 
 
Dec 17, 2009 4:16pm EST

Pakistan is corrupt; I should know I was born and raised there. But to have a trial, the only way to guarantee it’s unbiased, or not bought, is to have a jury outside Pakistan’s political and religious spheres of influence. A Pakistani jury will favor their archaic laws, and fear retaliation from Zardari if he or his friends got back into power in the future.

aster.gill Report As Abusive
 
 
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