Pakistan parties mull poll boycott

Pakistan parties mull poll boycott

Benazir Bhutto, the Pakistani opposition politician, has ruled out any more power-sharing talks with Pervez Musharraf, the country's president.

Bhutto, who before returning to Pakistan had been in negotiations with Musharraf, said on Monday she was changing tack after he refused to lift the state of emergency.

"We cannot work with anyone who has suspended the constitution, imposed emergency rule and oppressed the judiciary," Bhutto said in the eastern city of Lahore.

"We are saying no to any more talks. It is a change from my past policy."

Bhutto said she was also considering a boycott of the vote.

Musharraf's decision on Sunday to hold parliamentary elections on schedule in January came after the US and other Western nations expressed concerns over the possibility of delays.

Pro-Western figures

The US and Britain had quietly supported talks between Bhutto, a former prime minister, and Musharraf, hoping to unite two pro-Western figures and have them crack down on al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters.

Bhutto also promised to go ahead with a protest march planned for Tuesday and urged Pakistanis of all shades to join the motorcade protest - a three-four day procession from the city of Lahore to Islamabad.

The Pakistan People's Party, led by Bhutto, has said there could be violence if security forces attempt to stop the rally.

A government spokesman said she risked being placed under a restraining order.

"All processions, rallies, political gatherings at present are outlawed," Tariq Azim, the deputy information minister, said.

"So if she breaks the law then obviously she will not be allowed to do it."

Earlier, police ramped up security for Bhutto, saying they had received intelligence that a suicide bomber was planning to attack her in Lahore.

Sharif party reaction

The party of Nawaz Sharif, another former prime minister currently in exile in Saudi Arabia, has also set its terms for participation in the elections.

Raja Zafarul Haq, the chairman of Pakistan Muslim League, demanded restoration of the constitution, reinstatement of top judges purged by Musharraf and the release of detainees - as well as Sharif's return from exile."Under the current circumstances it is very difficult to expect there would be fair elections in the country," he told Associated Press Television News.

"Within the next week there will be meetings and we will finally decide whether to go for elections or agitation."

Musharraf said on Sunday that there would be no time limit on emergency rule, which he imposed on November 3.

He also said he would take the oath of office for another term as a civilian and relinquish his post as army chief, without giving a precise date.

On Sunday, Sharif told Al Jazeera that Musharraf's clampdown on Pakistan's judiciary also needed to be addressed.

"Before we talk about the elections, we should make sure that the judiciary in Pakistan will go back to the way it was before November 3, before declaring the state of emergency. And this is the most important matter," he said.

"That is why the elections will be useless if they are carried out in the absence of law and without the participation of all parties. Otherwise, the situation will become complicated."

Under the state of emergency, key figures in the judiciary have been sacked or detained, including Iftikhar Chaudhry, Pakistan's chief justice.

Musharraf criticized

The press in Pakistan on Monday joined criticism of Musharraf, saying that elections would be undermined if held under emergency rule.

"[Musharraf's] new scheme as announced casts a doubt on the credibility of the forthcoming elections," Dawn, Pakistan's oldest English language daily newspaper, said.

The Nation, another English language newspaper, on Monday said: "It would be hard to dispel the impression of a stage-managed affair without a free media, the freedom to hold meetings, take out processing and do canvassing - the traditional modes of electioneering."

However, Condoleeza Rice, US secretary of state, said she was concerned that Musharraf had not set a time limit for the end of emergency law.

"It's not a perfect situation," she said on Monday.

PHOTO CAPTION

Pervez Musharraf

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