Channelnewsasia.com
Friday, December 05, 2008
   
 
  blogs  
 
yournews
   
Mumbai Attacks
Video Finance Features Weather Travel Discussion TV Shows
CNA Live    | About Us 
 
  Home ›
 
Asia Pacific News

 
 

Pakistan's Sharif threatens to quit coalition over judges
Posted: 21 August 2008 1701 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 

ISLAMABAD : Former Pakistani premier Nawaz Sharif has threatened to quit the ruling coalition if it fails to reinstate judges sacked by president Pervez Musharraf, who resigned earlier this week.

The leaders of the fragile coalition that won elections in February, headed by the party of slain ex-prime minister Benazir Bhutto, are due to meet on Friday for crucial talks on the issue.

"If the judges are not restored we will perhaps be forced to sit in the opposition," Sharif said in an interview published in the Wall Street Journal on Thursday.

"We will not try to bring the government down. But of course then we have no choice but to sit in the opposition."

Musharraf stepped down on Monday in the face of coalition threats to impeach him over constitutional violations, including his ousting of dozens of senior judges in order to push through his re-election in November.

Sharif and Asif Ali Zardari, Bhutto's widower, agreed in May to reinstate nearly 60 high court and supreme court judges including chief justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, but have since squabbled over the issue.

Sharif -- who was ousted from power by Musharraf in 1999 -- said that Zardari had talked about restoring judges but not the independent-minded Chaudhry -- something Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party has denied.

"He has been saying to me 'reinstating the judges minus one.' The one being the chief justice. We've said it's not a question of any individual. It's a question of the institution," Sharif said.

Musharraf suspended Chaudhry on misconduct charges in March 2007, sparking massive nationwide protests.

The supreme court restored Chaudhry in July, but Musharraf imposed a state of emergency and sacked him in November when it looked like the court would overturn Musharraf's re-election by the outgoing parliament.

Sharif said Zardari had assured him that the judges would be restored within 24 hours of removing Musharraf.

"If they are not restored, it will be a bad day for democracy. It means whatever the dictator did to our country we aren't rectifying that," Sharif said.

Education minister Ahsan Iqbal, a key member of Sharif's Pakistan Muslim League-N, urged Zardari to honour the commitments made in an "iron-clad" agreement which has not been made public yet.

"We are very keen to make the coalition work, but it cannot work effectively when there is lack of trust and commitments are not honoured," Iqbal told AFP.

Iqbal said that the PPP had to take a decision by Friday

"If this agreement is not fulfilled, then how can we justify our stay in the coalition?"

Sharif pulled his ministers from the cabinet in May when the coalition failed for a second time to meet a deadline to reinstate the judges. Four ministers returned after the agreement to impeach Musharraf.

- AFP/vm

 

 



Other asiapacific News
Tourists flood out of Thailand but turmoil remains
Malaysia's government faces critical by-election test
India, Russia sign nuclear energy, space deals
Major alert at Delhi airport, police say situation "normal"
Taiwan ex-leader denies son laundered money in Japan
Rice says Pakistan pledges to investigate Mumbai attacks
Russia's Medvedev set to sign nuclear deal in India
Doctor visits Myanmar's Aung San Suu Kyi
Knife-wielding Indonesian pirates rob vessel off Malaysia's Tioman island
US, NKorea envoys in Singapore for talks
Indian opposition demands action against Pakistan
Dozens dead or missing in Philippines floods
Polluted Indonesian river to get major cleanup, says ADB
Philippines says leftist rebels spurned 2009 peace treaty
Nine killed in southern Thailand violence
Japanese still splurging on New Year gifts
Three dead in Pakistan market blast
Indonesia conducts study on yoga before issuing fatwa
Japanese climber dies hours before rescue on NZealand mountain

 


Advertisements

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions