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Rediff.com  » News » Musharraf is president only by default, says Zardari

Musharraf is president only by default, says Zardari

Source: PTI
June 09, 2008 16:48 IST
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Embattled Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf has suffered another setback with the ruling Pakistan's People's Party saying that it does not acknowledge him as a constitutional head as the former military strongman occupies the position by default.
 
PPP co-chairman Asif Ali Zardari has said that the coalition government at the Centre has a 'working relationship'
with Musharraf only because of the position he occupies.
 
"Since we have to run the affairs of the state, we have maintained a working relationship with the president," Zardari told reporters in Islamabad on Sunday.
 
"We have put aside our personal likes or dislikes as we neither give advantage nor disadvantage to anyone," said Zardari, who had recently described Musharraf as a 'relic of the past' standing between the people and democracy.
 
The PPP leader's comments came in the wake of assertions by Musharraf that he had no plans to resign or go into exile despite increasing pressure from political parties to step down.
 
Zardari, who was in Saudi Arabia with Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani for talks with the Saudi leadership, said the PPP did not believe in relations with personalities but worked for a stable political system and to strengthen
institutions.
 
The PPP had not supported any dictator in the past nor would it do so in future. The party had also never sought the support of dictators to come to power because it had always struggled for genuine democracy, he said.
 
"Security, economy and democracy in Pakistan are the priorities of the PPP-led government," Zardari said and blamed mismanagement and poor policies of the past decade for the current economic crisis.
 
Noting that Saudi leaders had always generously helped Pakistan and thought of protecting its interests, Zardari said Prime Minister Gilani's visit would add new dimensions to Pakistan's relations with the Gulf kingdom.
 
Pakistan imports around 250,000 barrels of oil a day from Saudi Arabia and it has been hit hard by the recent
increase in oil prices, which have resulted in its oil bill rising by over 40 per cent in around 10 months.
 
The government will also try to improve exports to India and he would visit India in the near future for this purpose, Zardari said.
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