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Business News/ Politics / News/  Nawaz Sharif deals a blow to fragile Pakistan government
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Nawaz Sharif deals a blow to fragile Pakistan government

Nawaz Sharif deals a blow to fragile Pakistan government

Finger-pointing: Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) chief Nawaz Sharif at a press conference in Islamabad on Monday. Ministers from the party will submit resignation to the prome minister today, Sharif anPremium

Finger-pointing: Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) chief Nawaz Sharif at a press conference in Islamabad on Monday. Ministers from the party will submit resignation to the prome minister today, Sharif an

Islamabad: Former prime minister Nawaz Sharif pulled his party out of Pakistan’s six-week-old coalition government on Monday, plunging the volatile Muslim nation back into political uncertainty.

Finger-pointing: Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) chief Nawaz Sharif at a press conference in Islamabad on Monday. Ministers from the party will submit resignation to the prome minister today, Sharif announced.

Sharif, whose Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) was the second largest member of a four party alliance, made the announcement after failing to break a deadlock with its main coalition partner over the reinstatement of dismissed judges.

Sharif made the restoration of 60 judges sacked by President Pervez Musharraf in November the main condition for joining the coalition led by the party of Asif Ali Zardari, the widower and political successor of late Benazir Bhutto.

Three days of talks in London between Sharif and Zardari, whose Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) leads the coalition, ended on Sunday without any breakthrough.

“Our ministers will meet the prime minister tomorrow (on Tuesday) and will submit their resignations," Sharif told a news conference.

Nine of the 24 ministers in Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani’s cabinet belong to the PML-N, including finance minister Ishaq Dar.

Sharif said his party would continue to support the PPP government despite quitting the cabinet.

“For the time being, we’ll not sit in opposition."

There had been high hopes that the alliance between the two main political forces would assert civilian rule in a country that has been led by generals, such as Musharraf, for more than half the time since it was founded in 1947.

Western allies in the war on terrorism dread nuclear-armed Pakistan sliding into a prolonged period of political instability.

If the PML-N were to withdraw support completely, analysts say, the PPP could end up inviting Musharraf’s allies to join the coalition, or call for another election.

The split in the coalition, analysts say, would be welcomed by US ally Musharraf, who came to power in a 1999 coup and only quit as army chief last November. The humiliating loss of parliamentary support in February polls had left him isolated.

Sharif, who was overthrown by Musharraf, wants the judges brought back as part of a strategy to drive his usurper from office. “We will not be part of any movement which strengthens a dictator and destablizes the democratic process. We’ll not destablize the democratic process," he said.

Zardari and Sharif signed a pact in March promising to restore the judges by 30 April but Sharif extended the deadline until 12 May because of Zardari’s foot-dragging.

Musharraf purged the judiciary during a brief period of emergency rule as he feared the supreme court could rule unlawful his re-election by the outgoing parliament in October.

The case against Musharraf could be revived if the judges are brought back, but Zardari is wary of confronting the president.

The uncertainty has taken its toll on financial markets already alarmed by Pakistan’s widening trade and fiscal deficits, and an annual inflation rate that leapt to 17.2% in April.

The Pakistani rupee fell to all-time lows of 69.40/60 to the dollar on Friday.

It closed at 68.00/69.00 on Monday, after a fragile recovery faltered and it slid from an open around 67.00.

Karachi Stock Exchange’s 100-share index fell 5% last week, but rose 0.41% to end at 14,286.61 points on Monday.Reuters

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Published: 12 May 2008, 10:17 PM IST
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