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Zardari, facing threat from army and an emerging judiciary, may hold on for some more time: NYT | Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari has come under relentless attacks from different quarters, but has some how managed to hold on to his chair, much to the discomfort to those who are vying for his blood. While Zardari, time
and again, has clarified that he does not face any threat from the Army, and that
he is ready to sacrifice himself for the sake of democracy, there are three major
factors posing a threat to his tattered 'Presidency'. "He's come to the conclusion
that if judiciary or the military want to knock him out, they can. But he wants
to fight back. That has given him a new lease on life, but his basic problem remains
the same," said Hasan Askari Rizvi, a Lahore-based analyst. The most serious of
the three threats has always been his strained relationship with the country's armed
forces, The New York Times reports. When he took office in September 2008,
Zardari struck a conciliatory tone with India, which angered the military, and
increased
problems for himself again when he indicated that intelligence should be under
civilian control. He has since backed off those positions. Analysts believe that
the most immediate threat to Zardari comes from the judiciary, as Chief Justice
Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry is leaving no stone unturned to topple him through
reopening the corruption cases following declaring the amnesty law, National
Reconciliation
Ordinance (NRO), defunct and unconstitutional. "You have the judiciary emerging
as a real force with populist ambitions. That is creating a huge gridlock. A clash
between Zardari and the judiciary is very likely now," said Najam Sethi, a
well-known
Pakistani journalist. Zardari is also battling attacks from the opposition; particularly
from former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif led Pakistan Muslim League-N (PML-N).
So far, Sharif has refused to join the chorus of voices calling for Zardari's
resignation. But his brother, Shahbaz Sharif, chief minister of Punjab Province,
has adopted a tough stand and has been vehemently demanding Zardari's removal.
However, the newspaper said that it is unlikely that Zardari's political opponents
would bring his downfall, and the Army seems to be least interested in another
stint in the country's politics. "Strangely, Zardari's weakness may serve him
in the end. The army seems to have less appetite to re-enter politics directly,
having seen its reputation badly tarnished during Musharraf's years of military
rule. A weak civilian leader, on the other hand, presents no threat to its power,"
it said. |
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