TPMMuckraker

Pakistan Set for State of Emergency?

It’s been a stormy day for Pervez Musharraf. First he blows off a joint Afghan-Pakistan anti-terrorism conference. Now Pakistani TV is reporting that Musharraf may declare a state of emergency.

An aide to the president, who requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue, said Musharraf was due to meet with Cabinet ministers, the attorney-general and leaders from the ruling party on Thursday to discuss whether an emergency should be declared.

He did not expect a declaration of an emergency in the early hours of Thursday.

“I cannot say that it will be tonight, tomorrow or later. We hope that it does not happen,” [Information Minister Tariq] Azim said. “But we are going through difficult circumstances so the possibility of an emergency cannot be ruled out.”

This could turn out to be nothing, of course. But if it happens, it would represent quite the kiss-off to Washington.

Musharraf is incensed that U.S. intelligence officials and the Democratic presidential candidates have accused him of insufficient action against terrorism. He also faces a precarious political situation: practically every segment of the population is sick of him, but he wants to be reelected as president while still serving as Army chief of staff.

And there’s his quandary. In Pakistan, the assemblies and the parliament elect the president. If he waits for those new provincial elections before running again, he might not be re-elected. And if he runs before the elections, in September or October, he might face Supreme Court challenges over his continued role as both civilian and military leader, further deepening his political crisis — especially given that his political woes began after he sacked the nation’s top jurist.

Much easier, by contrast, to declare a state of emergency and defer elections for a year or so, which might buy Musharraf some time. Furthermore, he can blame the emergency on a rising jihadist threat — precisely the one that the U.S. is warning about, thereby dampening criticism from Washington about democratic niceties. It wouldn’t be unusual: on an official visit in June, Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte said — contrary to Pakistan’s constitution — that Musharraf can decide for himself whether to step down as Army chief of staff.

Pervez Musharraf

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