Pakistan’s former military ruler steps down as party chair, not to return for polls

Pakistan’s former military ruler and dictator Pervez Musharraf has resigned from his political party, an indication he has no immediate plans to return home or support his party’s bid in the upcoming July elections. (AFP)
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Updated 25 July 2020
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Pakistan’s former military ruler steps down as party chair, not to return for polls

  • Musharraf is undergoing trial in a number of high-profile cases including treason charges against him for imposing a state of emergency on Nov. 3, 2007.
  • Supreme Court had conditionally allowed Musharrarf to contest general elections on July 25 if he appeared before the apex court but the former military ruler refused to return to Pakistan.

ISLAMABAD: Inadequate court assurances forced Pakistan’s former military ruler to step down from his party’s leadership ahead of the country’s general elections next month, an All Pakistan Muslim League (APML) spokesperson has told Arab News.

“We convened a central executive committee meeting on Thursday and unanimously nominated (general secretary) Dr. Amjad as the new chairman of the party and we will now campaign for the elections,” said spokesperson Mahreen Malik Adam.

Former president Gen. (retired) Pervez Musharraf will remain the party’s patron-in-chief “till the time his disqualification case is not dismissed by the court,” she said.

The newly elected APML chairman, Dr. Mohammad Amjad, on Friday told Arab News that Musharraf sent his resignation to the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) on Wednesday, June 20.

“I have been elected as party chairman by the party’s central executive committee and on June 20 we notified the ECP of our decision,” he said.

A court order implemented before the 2013 general election disqualified the former military ruler, who once wielded enormous power, from participating in politics for life.

For several months he remained under house arrest over a number of court cases stemming from his actions during his nine-year reign in Pakistan, including a charge of treason for imposing a state of emergency on Nov. 3, 2007 during his military rule.

He was eventually granted bail and went into self-imposed exile in Dubai.

The former army chief was indicted in the treason case in March 2014 after he appeared before the court and denied all charges of imposing emergency rule in 2007. The same month he traveled to the UAE for medical treatment and has since remained abroad.

In March 2018, a special court directed the federal government to block Musharraf’s CNIC and passport if he failed to appear before the bench in the treason case.

The special court later declared him a proclaimed offender and ordered the confiscation of his property.

Musharraf is also wanted in the courts for other cases, including the Benazir Bhutto murder case, the Red Mosque operation, and the Akbar Bugti murder in Baluchistan during his regime.

Pakistan’s Supreme Court in June this year ruled that Musharraf should be allowed to file his nomination papers for the general election, pending a decision on his appeal against the decision to ban him from standing. The panel of three judges also assured Musharraf’s defense counsel that the retired general would not be arrested on arrival.

That directive was withdrawn when Musharraf failed to appear before the court twice last week.

Adam called the court’s assurance a “honey trap” since it granted safe passage to the APML chief without arrest from the airport to the court on his return. “Other than that, there was no assurance that he will not be arrested,” Adam said.

She said: “He was not even given assurance that he would be allowed to participate in party campaigns with his workers” and no satisfactory guarantee was provided by the court on whether “his name would be listed or not on the Exit Control List (ECL),” which bars an individual from traveling overseas.

Former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, who was disqualified for life by the Supreme Court in 2017, is allowed to hold election campaigns, address large political gatherings and the state didn’t bar his travel despite several corruption cases against him and his family, she said, a relaxation “not given to our leader which is very unfair.”

“To return and get arrested or placed under house detention or jail and not able to do anything for the party, has no benefit for APML,” Adam said, defending Musharraf’s decision not to return.    


Musharraf founded the APML in 2010. Despite the party announcing a boycott of the 2013 election just days before the balloting, two of its candidates contested and won two seats from Chitral.

The newly elected chairman believes Musharraf’s resignation in no way signifies an end to his political career. “Musharraf has no desire to quit politics and his resignation is purely for legal purposes. When he returns, we will re-elect him as chairman of APML,” Amjad said.

Political analyst Qamar Cheema believes that there is no future for APML in Pakistan. 

“If Musharraf returns, there will be fresh disconnect between the military and civilian government, and that is not something the military wants ... they (the military) no longer want to take a risk on him, he has become a liability … a big personality who rattles the media once in a while,” Cheema said. 


Nigeria tanker truck blast toll rises to 86: rescuers

Updated 14 sec ago
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Nigeria tanker truck blast toll rises to 86: rescuers

LAGOS: The death toll from the explosion of a petrol tanker truck in Nigeria that killed people rushing to gather fuel has risen to 86, emergency services said Sunday.
"The final death toll from the tanker explosion is 86," said Ibrahim Audu Husseini, spokesman for the National Emergency Management Agency in Niger state.
The truck carrying 60,000 litres of gasoline exploded after flipping over on a road in the centre of the country on Saturday, authorities said.


Pope Francis calls for Gaza ceasefire to be ‘immediately respected’

Updated 11 min 50 sec ago
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Pope Francis calls for Gaza ceasefire to be ‘immediately respected’

  • Pope Francis: I also hope that humanitarian aid will even more quickly reach... the people of Gaza, who have so many urgent needs

VATICAN CITY: Pope Francis called Sunday for a ceasefire in Gaza to be “immediately respected,” as he thanked mediators and urged a boost in humanitarian aid as well as the return of hostages.
“I express gratitude to all the mediators,” the Argentine pontiff said shortly after the start of a truce between Israel and Hamas began.
“Thanks to all the parties involved in this important outcome. I hope that, as agreed, it will be immediately respected by the parties and that all the hostages will finally be able to go home to hug their loved ones again,” he said.
“I pray so much for them, and their families. I also hope that humanitarian aid will even more quickly reach... the people of Gaza, who have so many urgent needs,” Francis said.
“Both Israelis and Palestinians need clear signs of hope. I hope that the political authorities of both, with the help of the international community, can reach the right two-state solution.
“May everyone say yes to dialogue, yes to reconciliation, yes to peace,” he added.
A total of 33 hostages taken by militants during Hamas’s Oct. 7, 2023 attack on Israel are scheduled to be returned from Gaza during an initial 42-day truce.
Under the deal, hundreds of Palestinian prisoners are to be released from Israeli jails.
The truce is intended to pave the way for an end to more than 15 months of war sparked by Hamas’s attack, the deadliest in Israeli history.
It follows a deal struck by mediators Qatar, the United States and Egypt after months of negotiations, and takes effect on the eve of Donald Trump’s inauguration as US president.


Bangladesh seeks arrest of MP cricketer over bounced cheques

Updated 19 January 2025
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Bangladesh seeks arrest of MP cricketer over bounced cheques

  • Bangladesh court issues warrant for Shakib Al Hasan for bounced cheques totaling $300,000
  • Hasan is a former lawmaker from the party of autocratic, ousted ex-leader Sheikh Hasina

Dhaka: A Bangladeshi court issued an arrest warrant on Sunday for cricket star Shakib Al Hasan for bounced cheques totalling more than $300,000, in the latest blow for the ousted lawmaker.

“The court has previously summoned Shakib but he did not appear at the court,” said Mohammed Shahibur Rahman from the IFIC Bank, which filed the case.

“Now, the court has issued the warrant,” he said.

Shakib is a former lawmaker from the party of autocratic ex-leader Sheikh Hasina, who was overthrown by revolution and fled by helicopter to India in August 2024.

His links to Hasina made him a target of public anger and he was among dozens facing murder investigations for a deadly police crackdown on protesters during the uprising.

He has not been charged over those allegations.

Shakib was playing in a domestic Twenty20 cricket competition in Canada when Hasina’s government collapsed and has not returned to Bangladesh since.

The left-arm allrounder has played 71 Tests, 247 one-day internationals and 129 Twenty20s for Bangladesh, taking a combined 712 wickets.

However, he was left out of the 15-man squad for the one-day international tournament in the Champions Trophy in Pakistan and Dubai next month.

Najmul Hossain Shanto will captain the side, with Bangladesh placed in Group A alongside India, Pakistan and New Zealand.


UK family visa applicants from war-torn countries caught in bureaucratic limbo

Updated 19 January 2025
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UK family visa applicants from war-torn countries caught in bureaucratic limbo

  • Home Office granting just a handful of waivers to people in countries where biometric information cannot be collected
  • Those seeking refuge from Gaza, Sudan and Afghanistan among those awaiting authorization

LONDON: Refugees trying to escape Gaza, Sudan and Afghanistan and join family members in the UK are in limbo between government bureaucracy and a lack of biometric processing facilities.

As part of the family reunification visa application process, applicants must submit biometric information, usually including a fingerprint, at centers in the countries from which they apply.

But such centers often either do not exist in war-torn areas or the facilities are not available to gather the information. This means applicants must either complete the biometric processing once in the UK or be excused from the biometric process entirely.

Figures published by The Guardian on Saturday, however, show that just a handful of these deferrals or exemptions have been granted by the UK.

As of May 2024, 114 people had requested to have their applications “pre-determined” by delaying the submission of biometric data until reaching the UK. Another 84 people had requested to be excused from providing biometric information altogether. By February 2024, just eight predetermination cases and one excusal had been authorized.

The highest number of the requests came from Palestinians and those in Afghanistan and Sudan, where visa application centers have been forced to close due to conflict.

Members of parliament and charities have accused the Home Office of blocking people such in areas from joining their families in the UK.

They compared it to the situation in Ukraine, where people can apply for family reunification visas in the UK without submitting biometrics beforehand.

“The UK rightly welcomed Ukrainian refugees fleeing war. Why can’t the same compassion be shown to people from Gaza and elsewhere?” a coalition of independent MPs, including former Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn, told The Guardian.

Nick Beales, head of campaigns at the charity RAMFEL, which helps vulnerable migrants access justice, said: “This disclosure proves that it was actually impossible for people in conflict zones, such as Sudan and Gaza, to apply for visas even when they had clear family ties in the UK.”

A Home Office spokesperson told The Guardian they understood applicants may face challenging circumstances to reach a visa application center to submit biometrics, saying: “That is why individuals have the option to submit a biometric deferral request, which is assessed on its own merits, and exceptional circumstances are considered.”


Taliban deputy tells leader there is no excuse for education bans on Afghan women and girls

Updated 19 January 2025
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Taliban deputy tells leader there is no excuse for education bans on Afghan women and girls

  • The Taliban government has barred Afghan females from education after sixth grade
  • There are reports authorities had also stopped medical training and courses for women

A senior Taliban figure has urged the group’s leader to scrap education bans on Afghan women and girls, saying there is no excuse for them, in a rare public rebuke of government policy.
Sher Abbas Stanikzai, political deputy at the Foreign Ministry, made the remarks in a speech on Saturday in southeastern Khost province.
He told an audience at a religious school ceremony there was no reason to deny education to women and girls, “just as there was no justification for it in the past and there shouldn’t be one at all.”
The government has barred females from education after sixth grade. Last September, there were reports authorities had also stopped medical training and courses for women.
In Afghanistan, women and girls can only be treated by female doctors and health professionals. Authorities have yet to confirm the medical training ban.
“We call on the leadership again to open the doors of education,” said Stanikzai in a video shared by his official account on the social platform X. “We are committing an injustice against 20 million people out of a population of 40 million, depriving them of all their rights. This is not in Islamic law, but our personal choice or nature.”
Stanikzai was once the head of the Taliban team in talks that led to the complete withdrawal of foreign troops from Afghanistan.
It is not the first time he has said that women and girls deserve to have an education. He made similar remarks in September 2022, a year after schools closed for girls and months and before the introduction of a university ban.
But the latest comments marked his first call for a change in policy and a direct appeal to Taliban leader Hibatullah Akhundzada.
Ibraheem Bahiss, an analyst with Crisis Group’s South Asia program, said Stanikzai had periodically made statements calling girls’ education a right of all Afghan women.
“However, this latest statement seems to go further in the sense that he is publicly calling for a change in policy and questioned the legitimacy of the current approach,” Bahiss said.
In the Pakistani capital, Islamabad, earlier this month, Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai urged Muslim leaders to challenge the Taliban on women and girls’ education.
She was speaking at a conference hosted by the Organization of Islamic Cooperation and the Muslim World League.
The UN has said that recognition is almost impossible while bans on female education and employment remain in place and women can’t go out in public without a male guardian.
No country recognizes the Taliban as the legitimate rulers of Afghanistan, but countries like Russia have been building ties with them.