Imran Khan, the leader of the opposition Tehreek-e-Insaf party, is to be charged under anti-terrorism laws, the Pakistani police have said.
The former cricketer was arrested after leaving
Malik Mohammad Iqbal,
"Through his speeches he has been inciting people to pick up arms, he has been calling for civil disobedience, he was spreading hatred," Iqbal said.
"I came to the university to lead a rally of students against the dictator Musharraf and his illegal actions," Khan said.
"I would have presented myself for arrest in full public view, but my goal was to set in motion a student movement."
Khan said a group of students from the hardline Jamaat-e-Islami party had collaborated with the police to arrest him.
Kamal Hyder, Al Jazeera's correspondent in
"A government official told us this was a provincial issue and therefore that it is possible it could have happened at that level, but the government was not willing to confirm or deny the reports."
"If indeed the government does confirm that this has happened then Imran Khan is being tried by a very serious court, which is the anti-terrorist court."
Khan had been in hiding for 12 days after Musharraf declared emergency rule.
US mission
Khan's arrest came after the
John Negroponte, the
The move comes amid upheaval in
Tom Casey, the
Opposition alliance
In a separate development, the leaders of
The proposed pact was revealed by Benazir Bhutto, a former prime minister and head of the Pakistan Peoples' Party, who remains under house arrest in her
Bhutto has called on Musharraf to step down as president and said she is seeking a partnership with Nawaz Sharif, her long-time rival and the exiled leader of the Pakistan Muslim League.
She said: "[Musharraf] must quit as president and as chief of army staff.
"I call on the international community to stop backing ... the man whose dictatorship threatens to engulf this nuclear-armed state in chaos," she said.
She also said for the first time that she would not serve under Musharraf should he win the elections he has promised by January 9.
"I would not serve as prime minister under a man who has repeatedly broken his promises, who is a dictator," said Bhutto, who has previously held talks with Musharraf on sharing power.
On Wednesday, Sharif said he was ready to work with Bhutto, against Musharraf.
"We are ready to set aside our differences with the People's Party and work for the return of democratic rule," Sharif said by telephone from
Asked whether there was any possibility of a broad opposition coalition against Musharraf, Sharif said: "It's the need of the hour.
"There is no room for dictatorship in
PHOTO CAPTION
Imran Khan, the leader of the opposition Tehreek-e-Insaf party