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September 4, 2002 Wednesday Jamadi-us-Saani25,1423

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PML-N, PPP to evolve joint strategy



By Our Staff Correspondent


LONDON, Sept 3: The leaders of Pakistan People’s Party and Pakistan Muslim League (N) are in constant touch to evolve a future strategy following the recent developments ahead of the October polls.

Sources close to the PPP told Dawn here that the two parties were ready to extend cooperation at all levels to ensure that pro-Musharraf parties do not form the future government in Pakistan.

Meanwhile, the PPP has sought the British government’s help to stop what it called “victimization of Benazir Bhutto by the Musharraf government”.

A PPP UK leader Khawaja Shafique, headed a delegation on Monday, and handed a memorandum to 10 Downing Street, asking the British prime minister Tony Blair to intervene.

Earlier, almost 70 PPP supporters staged a noisy demonstration in front of the Pakistan High Commission protesting the rejection of Ms Bhutto’s nomination papers.

BRITISH DAILIES: One of the leading London-based papers, the Independent has criticized the Pakistan government for rejecting the PPP chairperson Benazir Bhutto’s nomination papers for the Larkana constituency.

The paper in its Saturday’s edition writes: “To pass a law which just so happens to disqualify your principal opponent from running for election is hardly the action of a ruler committed to democracy”.

The paper further says: “The democratic credentials of Pervez Musharraf, as he prepares for Pakistan’s elections on Oct 10, are therefore deeply suspected”.

The paper describes Benazir Bhutto as “one of Pakistan’s most popular post-independence leaders, she was not a particularly successful leader of the country either in 1988-90 or in 1993-96, saying that she still has a following. But in an interesting twist the paper praises President Musharraf’s foreign policy and describes him as “an effective leader of his country, abandoning its support for the Taliban regime in Afghanistan, taking some action against extremist Muslim terrorists based in Pakistan. It specifically mentions Musharraf’s stand on the recent stand-off between India and Pakistan and lauds him for remaining “calm in the face provocation by the Indian Prime Minister, Atal Behari Vajpayee”.

But the paper says: “Musharraf will not secure lasting stability for his country or the region unless he oversees a transition to a securely based and genuine democracy. And he cannot do that unless he lets Ms Bhutto run”.






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