Pervez Musharraf can submit nomination papers for general election

Former Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf. (AN photo by Ghaith Tanjour)
Updated 07 June 2018
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Pervez Musharraf can submit nomination papers for general election

  • Pakistan’s former military ruler will return from self-imposed exile after Eid-ul-Fitr to head his party’s campaign for July 25 poll.

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According to APML, Musharraf is likely to contest the 2018 general election from four constituencies, including Chitral, Jhang, Gawadar and Karachi.

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Supreme Court on Thursday ruled that the country’s former military ruler, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, should be allowed to file his nomination papers for the upcoming general election, pending a decision on his appeal against the decision to ban him from standing.


“I will ask returning officers to accept Musharraf’s nomination papers, but conditional to the final verdict on his appeal,” Chief Justice of Pakistan Saqib Nisar told Musharraf’s defense counsel.
The panel of three judges also assured the lawyer that the retired general would not be taken into custody.

“We will pass an order ensuring authorities do not arrest the former president before his appearance in court,” added Justice Nisar, but he said that Musharraf must appear in person at the apex court’s registry in Lahore on June 13 to file his papers with the Election Commission of Pakistan.


A court order imposed before the 2013 general election disqualified the former military ruler, who once wielded enormous power, from participating in politics for life. For several months, he remained under house arrest over a number of court cases stemming from his actions during his nine-year reign over Pakistan, including a charge of treason for imposing state of emergency in 2007 during his military rule. He was eventually granted bail and went into self-imposed exile in Dubai.


Musharraf was declared an absconder and in March a special court ordered the suspension of his passport and ID papers, the confiscation of all his assets, and told authorities to arrest him.



On Wednesday, Musharraf’s All Pakistan Muslim League (APML) party again trumpeted the expected return of its chairman.


“He will return after Eid, before the elections,” regardless of the court cases against him, said APML spokeswoman Mahreen Malik Adam. “We have to finalize these cases,” which cannot be dealt with while keeping a distance from the court proceedings, she added.


Musharraf has little option but to confront his legal troubles. The elections are a few weeks away and the party must prepare a campaign but has been lacking its leader, who feared he would be arrested upon return to Pakistan. Without him, APML’s chances seem slim, and candidates would face tough questions about his absence.


Adam is confident her party’s leader will return because, she says, the interim government will not apply political pressure, and because of changes in the judicial landscape which she believes will result in impartial investigations of politicians and military officers.


“We hope the judges will be lenient and serve justice”, said Adam. “It seemed like a one-way judiciary back then, which worked against Musharraf. The Nawaz Sharif administration was bent upon throwing him in prison. But now we are satisfied because everyone is being held accountable no matter how powerful.”


According to APML, Musharraf is likely to contest the 2018 general election from four constituencies, including Chitral, Jhang, Gawadar and Karachi.


Australia’s Liberals elect net zero opponent as new leader

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Australia’s Liberals elect net zero opponent as new leader

  • The Liberals have endured an agonizing existential crisis since their second consecutive defeat by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s Labor
SYDNEY: Australia’s opposition Liberal Party elected as leader on Friday a conservative who lobbied to drop its commitment to net zero emissions, as it seeks to counter an insurgent populist right and rebuild support after a disastrous election loss last year.
The Liberals have endured an agonizing existential crisis since their second consecutive defeat by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s Labor, torn between centrist factions and right-wingers skeptical of climate legislation and multiculturalism.
Angus Taylor — a former energy minister — replaced Sussan Ley, the party’s first female leader who had been in office for just nine months.
Speaking following his election, Taylor said his party faced a choice: “Change or die.”
He struck a hardline on immigration, claiming “our borders have been open to people who hate our way of life.”
And he said the party would stand against “Labor’s net zero ideology.”
Ley was ousted after a leadership challenge was called on Thursday, leading multiple members of her team to resign.
Opinion polling showing it falling behind the right-wing populist One Nation had spooked her party’s leadership.
Far-right One Nation leader Pauline Hanson has long been a fixture on the fringes of Australian politics, sparking outrage last year wearing a burqa in parliament in a stunt condemned as racist.
In an upbeat statement after she was ousted, Ley thanked her supporters and said she would quit politics.
Last month she endured a public spat with longtime coalition partners the Nationals, with whom the Liberal Party has governed Australia for much of the past century.
And in November the party dropped its commitment to net zero emissions, introduced in 2021 by former leader Scott Morrison when he was prime minister.
New leader Taylor was seen as a key proponent of the decision to drop the commitment to zero emissions.
The son of a sheep farmer, he is seen as part of the Liberal’s conservative faction.
He attracted online ridicule in 2019 when he replied to his own social media post with: “Fantastic. Great move. Well done Angus.”
‘Best qualified idiot’
“Angus Taylor has just taken on the hardest job in politics,” Zareh Ghazarian at the Monash School of Social Sciences said.
“Angus Taylor now has to demonstrate what his vision is for the party, and what approach he will take to unite the party and galvanize support from the broader community,” he said.
Former Liberal leader and prime minister Malcolm Turnbull warned the party against further drifting to the right.
“That will condemn the Liberal Party to further irrelevance,” Turnbull, a prominent centrist, told national broadcaster ABC.
“A lot of people say about Angus Taylor is he has been the best qualified idiot they’ve ever met,” he said.
“He has this hugely qualified resume but then when you look at what done in politics so far it has been disappointing.”
Australia’s next general election must be held by May 2028.