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Bhutto: Musharraf to step down as army chief

Move will likely come before next presidential vote, exiled former PM says

updated 12:03 p.m. ET Aug. 29, 2007

LONDON - President Gen. Pervez Musharraf and former rival Benazir Bhutto have reached an agreement regarding Musharraf’s military role, a key step toward a power-sharing deal, a senior official said Wednesday.

“Both sides have agreed on the issue of uniform,” Railways Minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed, a close Musharraf ally, told reporters, referring to the president’s military role.

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Bhutto was quoted in a British newspaper making a similar comment, although neither she nor Ahmed said explicitly that Musharraf had agreed to her demand that he step down as army chief.

Envoys for the U.S.-allied president are trying to work out a pact with Bhutto, an exiled former prime minister, that would rescue his bid for another five-year presidential term.

Bhutto and other opposition leaders argue the constitution obliges Musharraf, who seized power in a coup in 1999, to give up his post as military chief before he asks lawmakers for a fresh mandate in September or October.

However, Musharraf has insisted the constitution allows him to remain in uniform until the end of 2007 and has left open what will happen after that.

Bhutto was quoted in Wednesday’s Daily Telegraph as saying that the “uniform issue is resolved.”

“The uniform issue is key and there has been a lot of movement on it in the recent round of talks,” Bhutto told the London-based daily.

Both Bhutto and Ahmed said the two sides were close to an agreement but that there were still outstanding issues.

Eroding authority
In Washington, State Department spokesman Tom Casey would not comment directly on the reports that Musharraf and Bhutto had come to a deal.

“Our principal concern in Pakistan is that there be free, fair and transparent elections held in which all legitimate political forces in the country have an opportunity to participate,” Casey said. “We certainly want to see the Pakistanis have an electoral process that results in a government that they feel represents their interests.”

Musharraf has seen his authority erode since March, when he tried unsuccessfully to remove the Supreme Court’s top judge. The move triggered protests that grew into a broad campaign against his continued rule.

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The court reinstated the judge in July, raising expectations that it will uphold legal challenges to Musharraf’s re-election. The court on Wednesday admitted a petition filed by Qazi Hussain Ahmad, head of the Islamist Jamaat-e-Islami party, against Musharraf’s dual role as president and military chief.

Last week, the court ruled that Nawaz Sharif, the prime minister toppled in 1999 who is also living in exile, can return to Pakistan ahead of parliamentary elections due by January.

Sharif quickly denounced Musharraf as a dictator who must be removed from the political scene.


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