Thursday, 28 March 2013

13 Musharraf returns with pledge ‘save’ Pakistan


KARACHI: Former military ruler Pervez Musharraf returned home on Sunday after more than four years in exile, defying a Taliban death threat and vowing to risk his life to “save” the country.

“I have come back home today. Where are those who used to say I would never come back?” the former dictator, who plans to stand in a historic May 11 general election, told supporters at Karachi airport. Shortly before Musharraf’s arrival, Pakistan selected a caretaker prime minister, retired judge Mir Hazar Khan Khoso, to guide the country through the elections. Musharraf’s power base has all but evaporated and he is not thought likely to win more than a couple of seats for his All Pakistan Muslim League, which he founded in self-imposed exile with the help of Pakistani expatriates.

“I am very nostalgic but very happy to be back after four years,” he told AFP on his Emirates flight from Dubai. Musharraf faces several court cases related to his time in office and he remains a highly controversial figure in a country struggling to shake off the legacy of extended periods of military rule.




The outgoing government has rolled back much of the constitutional meddling of Musharraf and his predecessors. Only hundreds of people greeted him at the airport, beating drums, dancing, waving flags and scattering rose petals. When he left the airport in a giant convoy, flanked by security protection, no one lined the main highway.

“I don’t get scared by anyone except Allah the Almighty... I have come back by putting my life in danger,” Musharraf told his supporters. A court has granted him temporary reprieve from arrest, but he is wanted over the 2007 assassination of former premier Benazir Bhutto; the 2006 death of Akbar Bugti, and the 2007 sacking of judges. “I have been ordered by my people to come back and save our Pakistan, even at the risk of my life. I want to tell all those who are making such threats that I have been blessed by Allah the Almighty,” Musharraf said.

Security concerns forced him to scrap plans to hold a public rally at the Quaid’s mausoleum after the Taliban threatened to send a squad of suicide bombers to assassinate him. In Quetta, hundreds of tribesmen protested at Musharraf’s arrival, chanting “America’s friends are traitors!” and setting fire to a US flag with his picture over it, an AFP reporter saw.

Police at the airport said 1,000 well-wishers turned out although an AFP reporter said the number appeared about half that. Members of the crowd, who were kept waiting for a couple of hours and then could not hear Musharraf’s speech, told AFP they were disappointed. “The sound system was so poor I couldn’t catch a single word of his speech,” said Afzaal Ahmad, 55, a civil servant who came with his two grandsons. “It was also quite disappointing that the public meeting (at Jinnah’s tomb) was cancelled, but I am happy that I was at least able to see him for the first time.”


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