Zardari gets 24-hour deadline, Kayani meets president

By IANS,

Islamabad : Pakistan’s army chief Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani Friday met President Asif Ali Zardari amid reports that he had been given 24 hours to act on the lawyers’ stir for overturning the controversial measures of former ruler Pervez Musharraf.


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A spokesperson for the presidency said regional issues, the political situation prevailing in the country and professional issues came under discussion during the meeting between Zardari and Kayani.

The 24-hour deadline was set under a new deal “backed by Washington, London and the army establishment”, the website of A Pakistan News said.

Zardari, the website reported, was Friday “asked to go by the army and Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani if he does not accept a new deal hatched by them in consultation with foreign powers”.

“The new political deal, backed by Washington, London and the army establishment, has quietly been conveyed to Gilani to bring down the political temperature in Pakistan,” the website quoted sources as saying.

As part of the deal, the sources added, Gilani has been asked to “immediately convince” Zardari to “demonstrate the flexibility required” to break the deadlock before the lawyers’ Long March reaches Islamabad.

“The ball is now firmly in the court of Zardari, who has to take a decision swiftly on endorsing the agreement brokered by powerful international actors.”

Thousands of lawyers Thursday simultaneously began their Long March from Sindh, Balochistan and Punjab and will converge here March 16 for a sit-in before parliament to demand the reinstatement of the Supreme Court and high court judges Musharraf had sacked after imposing an emergency in November 2007.

Kayani, the report said, met Gilani in Islamabad Wednesday and during the 90 minute meeting, asked him to set the deal in motion.

According to the report, if Zardari does not accept the new deal, the president’s office “will be completely marginalised, Zardari will be removed”, Gilani will “take over” after power “will be restored” to the prime minister’s office.

Musharraf had transferred these powers to the presidency through the controversial 17th constitution amendment in December 2003. They relate to the appointment of military commanders and the right to dismiss the federal and provincial governments.

Also, as part of the deal, the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) of former prime minister Nawaz Sharif will join the federal cabinet and deposed Supreme Court chief justice Iftikar Mohammad Chaudhary will be reappointed, the report added.

It, however, was silent on Zardari’s future if he is removed from office.

In other developments Friday, Sharif said he was ready for “face-to-face” talks with Zardari to resolve the impasse.

“There is no need for back channels. We can and should talk face-to-face,” Sharif told Geo TV in an interview.

Sharif, whose PML-N has jumped onto the Long March bandwagon, is also upset over a Supreme Court judgement barring him and his brother from contesting elections.

The verdict led to the fall of Shahbaz Sharif’s government in Punjab and Governor’s Rule being imposed in the province.

Nawaz Sharif has accused Zardari of engineering the court judgement.

As speculation mounted over the political crisis in the country, a top US military official said Kayani was not in favour of a military coup.

In an interview to a US TV channel, Admiral Mike Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Kayani was a stanch supporter of democracy and did not want military coup in the country.

A Pakistan News, according to a positing on its website, “is managed by a team of professional news editors, sub editors and independent reporters”.

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