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    Musharraf will return to Pakistan after tensions end - APML

    DUBAI (Reuters) - Former president Pervez Musharraf will return to Pakistan once the tensions between the government and the Supreme Court subside, a senior official in his All Pakistan Muslim League (APML) said Friday.

    Musharraf announced this month he planned to return home between January 27 and 30 and take part in a parliamentary election due to be held by 2013, but later said aides had advised him to delay his return due to political instability.

    Mohammad Saif, secretary-general of APML, said Musharraf did not want his return to overshadow a contempt case being heard in the Supreme Court against Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani that could push him out of office.

    "General Musharraf will return to Pakistan, that's for sure. But we are waiting for the tension between the government and the Supreme Court to subside," Saif told journalists in Dubai.

    "The government, which is bogged down in court cases and has failed on both economic and political fronts, would try to wiggle out of this situation by diverting the attention to General Musharraf."

    He gave no date for Musharraf's return.

    Pakistan's Supreme Court Thursday adjourned the contempt hearing for Gilani which is adding to growing pressure on the unpopular civilian government.

    Gilani was in court to explain why he should not be charged with contempt for failing to re-open old corruption cases against President Asif Ali Zardari. The government maintains Zardari has presidential immunity.

    Saif said Musharraf was upset by the delay, but took the advice of his party and would stay in Dubai until his return home. Musharraf was not at the news conference.

    Pakistan's government also faces pressure from the military over a mysterious memo seeking U.S. help to avert an alleged planned coup last year.

    Musharraf, who seized power in a 1999 coup and briefly imposed a state of emergency in Pakistan before resigning in 2008, has been living in Dubai for almost three years.

    (Reporting by Amena Bakr; Writing by Nour Merza; Editing by Sami Aboudi and Robert Woodward)

     

    3 comments

    • hadjihashish  •  25 days ago
      The good General should retire from active life because his career as a politician is going nowhere. Rather than coming back to Pakistan where a lot of vengeful and powerful people who hate him are waiting to see him behind bars, he should spend time with his grandchildren and cash in on the lucrative international lecture circuit where he is in demand presently. He's played his innings and a good one at that. Although controversial, he governed Pakistan to the best of his ability doing better than most, only to be let down by that bane of 3rd world dictators, megalomania.
    • Nick  •  London, England  •  26 days ago
      I am sure he could put that country into some order.
    • fiaz  •  Huddersfield, England  •  26 days ago
      no matter who goes into pakistan, pakistan will be pakistan, ppl like these who have no morals these ppl will n have sold there own mothers to the west for the greed of money n power, forgetting that one day the almighty allah the creator who created us will punish us, so nick my friend forget about it,