Gen. Musharraf to become Mr. Musharraf on Thursday

Posted on November 27, 2007
Filed Under >Darwaish, History, Law & Justice, People, Politics
139 Comments
Total Views: 164918

Darwaish

So finally, General Pervez Musharraf would become Mr. Pervez Musharraf on Thursday when he will be sworned in as a civilian president at the Aiwan-i-Sadr, Islamabad (13th president of Pakistan). Gen. Musharraf will retire after occupying Chief of the Army Staff post for more than nine years. Given a choice, I am sure he would have loved to continue for another 5-10 years and beat the record set by late Gen. Zia. But anyways, Musharraf paid farewell visits to Joint Staff, Air and Naval headquarters today where he met senior military officials one last time as COAS. Former DG ISI, Gen. Ashfaq Pervez Kayani will take over as new Chief of the Army Staff from Thursday. ATP readers who wish to know more about Gen. Kayani may find this bbc article very interesting.

Musharraf is taking his uniform off at a time when he has become highly unpopular, country is under unnecessary Martial Law, judiciary has been completely destroyed, lawyers and civil society are on the streets protesting against him, media is under severe curbs and he hardly has any friends left anywhere. It would be interesting to see how Gen. Musharraf survives in future as a civilian president.

He would require endorsement of PCO and all his actions since November 3 from newly elected assembly, if elections are held, which will be an uphill task and I really don’t see HOW it will happen unless Q-League wins again.

But then again, anything is possible in Pakistan. Who knows, Q-League wins with a heavy mandate this time after brilliant performance of 5 years in power.

According to Daily Times:

President General Pervez Musharraf would take oath as civilian president at 11am on Thursday, but before this he would relinquish charge of chief of army staff (COAS) to start his second term as president of Pakistan.

“Yes, he is going to take oath at 11am on Thursday,” Musharraf’s spokesman Maj Gen (r) Rashid Qureshi told Daily Times on Monday. He also confirmed that the Ministry of Defence had issued a notification of his retirement as army chief after being in office for nine years.

Farewell: Defence Ministry sources said Musharraf would start holding farewell meetings today (Tuesday) – a clear indication that he had decided to call it a day. “Musharraf will meet top military commanders, principal staff officers and senior colleagues,” defence sources said. The formal handing over of charge to his successor is also part of the farewell proceedings, they added. The sources said Musharraf was fulfilling the promise he made to the nation and the Supreme Court of vacating the army post before taking oath as president. Preparations for the ceremony to mark the change of army command are underway, and a formal ceremony will take place at General Headquarters in Rawalpindi, defence sources said.

After the completion of the ceremony, the Defence Ministry will announce the appointment of the new chief of army staff, sources said. A special meeting of corps commanders is expected before the handing over ceremony, they added.

Born in 1943 in New Delhi, Musharraf enrolled in the Kakul Military Academy in 1961. He was commissioned in the Artillery Regiment in 1964. Former premier Nawaz Sharif appointed him as the country’s 13th army chief on October 8, 1998. On October 12, 1999, he ousted Sharif in a bloodless coup and bundled him off to Saudi Arabia on December 10, 2000. On October 7, 2001, Musharraf extended his military term, which is supposed to be a three-year tenure post, for an unspecified period. After the late General Ziaul Haq, who was army chief for more than 12 years from April 1, 1976 to August 17, 1988, Musharraf’s tenure as army chief has been the longest. Last week, the new SC judges validated Musharraf’s victory in an October 6 presidential election, clearing the way for him to serve a further five years in office.

Army security, staff to stay: Sources said President Musharraf’s security would remain entrusted to the army, even after taking oath as a civilian president. A special contingent of Pakistan Army’s Special Services Group, headed by a brigadier, has been tasked with ensuring Musharraf’s security. General Musharraf has also decided to retain his current military staff after resigning as army chief, it was learnt. This includes a full time military secretary, deputy military secretary and deputy chief of staff.

It is too early and premature to say what legacy Gen. Musharraf is leaving as COAS and how he will be remembered. Only time will tell. After all, he is still going to rule us for another 5 years (atleast he thinks that way). So what if he is wearing a suit this time. But lets just hope that Gen. Kayani stays away from politics and takes serious steps to improve the deteriorating image of Pakistan Army.

139 responses to “Gen. Musharraf to become Mr. Musharraf on Thursday”

  1. RE says:

    Yes there will be another coup if politicians take out money from Pakistani Banks and fail to perform their duty and act uncivilized. Its very important Pakistan produce new credible politicians.

  2. Ahmad R. Shahid says:

    Some people are predicting that there would be yet another coup in a few years that would once again derail the entire process and bring military back into the corridors of power. The history of Pakistan over the last 60 years bears testimony to it. Yet it might not really happen for various reasons.

    Each such military take over has its costs, and in my view the costs are rising for many reasons. 1) When Ayub Khan took over there were many countries in the world that were not democratic, which later became democratic such as South Korea, Malaysia, Indonesia, Brazil, Spain, Nepal, Iran, Russia, Central Asian States, Eastern Europe and many others. A few countries were still colonies of the West such as Rhodesia, now Zimbabwe. In 1999 when Musharraf took over many of these countries had become democratic or were in the process of becoming one, and as such there was few colonies left if any. In the future whenever the military takes over, a few more countries would be even more democratic than before. Thus it would not be possible for the next military dictator to be as blind in his ambitions as they have been before because of all the international pressure, which we know very well plays big part in countries such as Pakistan, which have strategic importance and location. 2) Our civil society, no matter how nascent, is taking shape now as is evidenced by the recent movement in favor of the CJ. That civil society is only going to become stronger with the passage of time. 3) The courts have been showing more and more independence over time. Its not the first time that the executive had problems with the Judiciary. Both NS and BB had their own shares of the problem. Yet even after both decimated any challenge to their authority in the courts, courts became more powerful over time. Under CJ Iftikhar, they were the strongest so far. And judging by the reaction of the people it seems that this decimation by Musharraf is just a blip in the rising graph of judicial independence.

    All these things raise the cost of a military take over. No wonder the cost had become so high that first time in the history of the country, a sitting COAS ruler had to take off his uniform, which is no mean achievement. I hope, and there are indicatons that it will, the costs would rise further and in future a military hemlsman might even have to loose his life to impose a martial law.

  3. RE says:

    After Mohammad Ali Jinah only strong leader Pakistan has experienced is Mushraf. A true worker. What he did for Pakistan will be remembered in coming years. He was under pressure and he did what he thought was right for Pakistan.
    A good leader never comes under pressure. A true solder does everything in favor of his country.
    Many prayers for respectful Mushraf.
    Now I request our politicians one can laugh at them. Act sober and civilized. Keep Pakistan on your top list.
    Allah Bless Pakistan

  4. RE says:

    Many times Army has interfered in the state matters because they were asked by the politicians of opposition parties or people of Pakistan indirectly ask for it.
    Now Army Generals are Pakistani Citizens , Well educated , well mannered , fought wars to defend Pakistan.Historically during their times Pakistan made money all other times Pakistan lost money. I am not saying Pakistan Army should interfere without any reasons. Like I said Pakistan has not produced credible Politicians this is not fault of Army. Army has only saved Pakistan and politicians came to take Pakistan backward in past. Hopefully future will be better.
    Allah Bless Pakistan Army and Pakistan.
    Keep eyes and ears open enemy is inside Pakistan and enemy is online every where. Even here , Nuclear powers do not fight wars with rockets and bombs , they are fought with espionage and manipulations. Enemy is doing exactly this to take Pakistan back. Watch out.
    Allah bless Pakistan

  5. ATP Administrator says:

    Dear Readers,
    we are (once again) forced to remind all readers to please respect our comment policy – particularly in relation to personal attacks and comments (instead of commenting on commentors, please comment on the issues at hand; also, please do not take conversations towards irrelevant or inappropriate tangents simply as a distracting strategy). We have seen a great rise in unpleasant, inappropriate and unwelcome comments. It is now wasting too much of ours and our readers time and bandwidth to go through these petty personal bickerings. PLEASE REFRAIN FROM IT. Please read and re-read the comment policy. We do NOT restrict any comment based on the substance and whether we agree with the substance. We do, however, try to weed out all comments that abuse our comment policy, even when we might agree with teh substance. Since a number of people have been regularly abusing our comment policy and our patience, a number of readers (of all political persuations) have been put under moderation. Only those of their comments that do meet the comment policy will be approved.

    Thanks, and please help us by not forcing us to moderate out your comments.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*