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Musharraf
empowers himself
Islamabad |By Shahid
Hussain | Gulf News, 22-08-2002
President General Pervez Musharraf yesterday empowered himself to
dismiss the future National Assembly and established a National
Security Council (NSC) to give the armed forces a first-time
formal role in politics.
Musharraf, who has scheduled parliamentary elections on October 10
to return Pakistan to civilian governance after a three-year
military rule, enforced the measures through constitutional
amendments he announced at a news conference.
"I am making it a part of the constitution through power
given to me by the Supreme Court of Pakistan," Musharraf
said, referring to the May 2000 judicial verdict that validated
the military coup.
Musharraf said he would relinquish the office of chief executive
but would remain president for another five years after the
elections and concurrently continue to hold the post of army
chief.
The amendments empower the president to appoint services chiefs,
including chairman of joint chiefs of staff committee. They also
allow dissolution of any Provincial Assembly by the relevant
governor with the approval of the president.
The president said the NSC would oversee all matters pertaining to
national security and integrity, governance by the elected prime
minister and issues related to inter-provincial harmony.
The NSC, headed by the president, will be composed of the prime
minister, the leader of the opposition, heads of National Assembly
and senate, four provincial chief ministers, chiefs of the army,
the air force and the navy and the chairman of the joint chiefs of
staff committee.
Musharraf said the presence of the military in politics would
guarantee against future coups by the military.
"I say, if you want to keep the military out you have to get
them in and I mean every word of it," Musharraf said after
announcing the formation of the council.
"Military takeovers will not be a possibility because we have
taken in (on the council) those who can make rash decisions,"
he said in a reference to the three military coups experienced by
Pakistan in its 55 year history.
"It will be a powerful body. It will not have any intrusive
role. It will not interfere in the working of the
government."
He rejected the opposition demand for appointment of a caretaker
government to hold the elections, but said this system would be
followed when elections would be held after a five-year tenure of
the assembly to be elected in October.
Musharraf promised to relax a ban on political activities
before the polls, without indicating an exact date. He said the
government would allow public meetings but the restrictions on
processions and demonstrations would remain in force.
The president held out the assurance that he would provide a
"level playing field" for all political parties to
campaign and participate in the elections.
The presidential authority to dissolve National Assembly was
scrapped by the government of prime minister Nawaz Sharif, who was
deposed by the military in October 1999 and exiled a year
afterwards to Saudi Arabia.
Opposition parties bitterly contested the amendments after they
were unveiled for a public debate by the military government's
National Reconstruction Bureau in June.
Former prime minister Benazir Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party,
Sharif's Pakistan Muslim League (PML-N) and other opposition
parties are now pinning hopes on the elections to snatch enough
clout in the assembly to carry out their vow to overturn the
amendments.
The erstwhile dominant political leaders, who were both twice
elected prime minister and twice dismissed by presidents for
alleged corruption and misrule in the last decade, have been
barred from politics by the military ruler. |
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