Musharraf relents as Sharif to return to Pakistan
ISLAMABAD - Exiled former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, the man President Pervez Musharraf deposed, is set to return to Pakistan within days, aides said on Friday, after a deal to lift his exile in Saudi Arabia.
It was not immediately clear whether Sharif, whom Musharraf deposed in a bloodless 1999 coup, would get back before November 26, the last date for filing election nominations and so be able to run for parliament.
He was due to meet King Abdullah in Riyadh for a "farewell meeting" before flying to London, Sharif's political base for the latter part of his exile, a Saudi government source said.
Musharraf, under intense criticism at home and abroad for imposing emergency rule three weeks ago, had agreed to Sharif's return during discussions with Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah, a leader of the ruling Pakistan Muslim League said.
Government officials were not immediately available for comment.
Overnight the Commonwealth suspended Pakistan's membership of the grouping of mostly former British colonies. The move underlined the pressure General Musharraf has been under since invoking emergency powers to shore up his presidency.
Western governments fear that stifling democracy could benefit Islamist militants threatening nuclear-armed Pakistan.
Politically isolated, Musharraf paid a surprise visit to Riyadh on Tuesday, sparking speculation that he was reaching out to his old foe to strengthen his support base ahead of a January 8 general election.
Sharif flew to Riyadh overnight from the Red Sea port of Jeddah, where he has stayed since the Pakistani authorities deported him after he tried ending his exile last September.
"God willing, he will return in a few days," said Raja Zafar-ul-Haq, chairman of the Nawaz League as Sharif's faction of the Pakistan Muslim League is known. A party spokesman said he was expected to return "within four or five days".
Diplomats say Saudi Arabia was embarrassed by its complicity in Sharif's exile and had wanted the situation resolved.
DEFECTIONS LIKELY
Musharraf imposed a two-term limit on the prime ministership in 2002, which currently bars both Sharif and opposition leader Benazir Bhutto from another stint.
Bhutto flew to Islamabad from the southern city of Karachi on Friday to meet her party leadership. She made no comment.
Having spent eight years trying to marginalise Sharif, and having allowed Bhutto back last month, Musharraf appears to have admitted his failure to re-engineer Pakistan's polity, sundered by the coup that ended a decade of chaotic civilian rule.
Musharraf co-opted the rump of Sharif's Pakistan Muslim League after ousting him. Confusingly there are now two PMLs, although Sharif's is usually referred to as the Nawaz League.
Aaj Television quoted Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain, leader of the ruling PML, as saying that the party was not scared that its former boss Sharif was coming back.
Hussain was probably putting on a brave face, as many of his party could flock to Sharif's banner, given that Musharraf and his intelligence officials appeared to have done a deal.
News that Sharif would soon return, and talk that the emergency might soon be lifted, buoyed the Karachi stock market, which was up 1.2 percent. It has now clawed back much of the 6 percent it shed following emergency rule on November3.
But many ordinary Pakistanis are despondent.
"(Sharif's) return will make no difference because no system is working here," said Sehar Ali, a schoolteacher.
A Supreme Court packed with government-friendly judges finally gave Musharraf satisfaction on Thursday, ruling that his October 6 re-election by parliament had been valid.
He is now expected to quit the army and be sworn in for a second five-year term as a civilian, but analysts doubt that he can last that long with both Bhutto and Sharif back.
The Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group (CMAG), meeting in Uganda overnight, suspended Pakistan's membership "pending the restoration of democracy and the rule of law in that country", Secretary-General Don McKinnon told a news conference.
Musharraf has already started to roll back the emergency, releasing some 5,000 opposition activists and lawyers rounded up after it was imposed. Private TV channel ARYone World resumed broadcasting on Friday after it was suspended along with a number of others amid stiff media curbs.