Former Pakistan military ruler Musharraf gravely ill, says family

A journalist watches a video statement of the ailing exiled former Pakistani military ruler Pervez Musharraf in a hospital bed in Dubai, in Islamabad, Pakistan, on December 19, 2019. (AFP/File)
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Updated 10 June 2022
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Former Pakistan military ruler Musharraf gravely ill, says family

  • Musharraf seized power in 1999 after then-PM Nawaz Sharif tried to dismiss him as army chief
  • The four-star general swiftly aligned with Washington after the 9/11 attacks on United States

ISLAMABAD: Former Pakistan military strongman Pervez Musharraf was gravely ill in Dubai, his office said Friday, warning that the 78-year-old was unlikely to recover. 

“Going through a difficult stage where recovery is not possible and organs are malfunctioning,” a message on his official Twitter page said, adding the news came from his family. 

Musharraf seized power in 1999 in a bloodless coup after the then-prime minister Nawaz Sharif tried to dismiss him as army chief, having appointed him above more senior officers a year earlier. 

The four-star general was ruling Pakistan as a “chief executive” when the 9/11 attacks on the US took place, and swiftly aligned with Washington during its military intervention in neighboring Afghanistan. 

In more than seven years in office, he oversaw a stint of economic growth while dodging at least three assassination attempts. 

Musharraf won a five-year term as president in a 2002 referendum, but reneged on promises to quit as army chief until late 2007. 

His easygoing charm also failed to mask the blurring of the division between the state and army, and he fell out of favor after trying to sack the chief justice. 

After the December 2007 assassination of opposition leader Benazir Bhutto, the national mood soured even more and crushing losses suffered by his allies in 2008 elections left him isolated. 

Musharraf’s plan to return to power in 2013 was dashed when he was disqualified from running in an election won by Nawaz Sharif — the man he deposed in 1999. 

In 2016, a travel ban was lifted and Musharraf traveled to Dubai to seek medical treatment. 

Three years later, he was sentenced to death in absentia for treason, related to his 2007 decision to impose emergency rule. However, a court later nullified the ruling. 


Gunmen kill 3 Revolutionary Guards in Iranian province bordering Pakistan

Updated 10 December 2025
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Gunmen kill 3 Revolutionary Guards in Iranian province bordering Pakistan

  • Iranian state media says attackers ambushed patrol in Sistan and Baluchistan province before fleeing
  • Border region with Pakistan and Afghanistan has long seen militant and smuggling-related violence

TEHRAN: Gunmen killed three members of the Revolutionary Guard in Iran’s southeastern province of Sistan and Baluchistan near the Pakistan border, state media reported.

The Guard members were ambushed while patrolling near the city of Lar in a mountainous area about 1,125 kilometers (700 miles) southeast of the capital Tehran, the official IRNA news agency reported.

IRNA did not report whether any Guard members were injured in the attack.

The Revolutionary Guard is pursing the attackers it calls “terrorists,” but they remain at large. No group has taken responsibility for the attack, IRNA reported.

The province bordering Afghanistan and Pakistan, one of the least developed in Iran, has been the site of occasional deadly clashes involving militant groups, armed drug smugglers and Iranian security forces.

In August, Iran’s security forces killed 13 militants in three separate operations in the province a week after the group killed five policemen who were on patrol.