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Pakistan Rejects Concern Over Democracy, Bush Praises Musharraf  

Musharraf

ISLAMABAD, August 23 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – Pakistan rejected the concern of U.S. officials regarding Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf’s controversial moves to broaden his powers, including sacking an elected parliament, while U.S. President George W. Bush praised his ally. Meanwhile, the U.S signed an agreement rescheduling payments on some three billion dollars in arrears and interest on debts owed by Pakistan.

Pakistan on Friday, August 23, rejected as “ill-informed” U.S. expressions of concern over its commitment to democracy, on the eve of a visit here by Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.

U.S. officials upbraided President Pervez Musharraf for awarding himself sweeping powers by single-handedly amending the constitution to enable the president to sack parliament, and cementing a military role in politics.

State Department spokesman Philip Reeker said the United States was “concerned that his recent decision could make it more difficult to build strong democratic institutions in Pakistan.”

Bush however was less challenging, as he steered clear of criticizing Musharraf’s moves, praising instead his help in the “war on terrorism.”

“He’s still tight with us on the war against terror, and that’s what I appreciate,” the U.S. leader told reporters, vowing to “work with our friends and allies to promote democracy.”

Bush’s comments, which came in response to reporters’ questions about the political situation in Pakistan, appeared to strike a less challenging tone than reactions from his own spokesman and the U.S. State Department, AFP said.

Earlier, White House spokesman Ari Fleischer upbraided Musharraf, saying the U.S. president “expects” the army chief, who seized power in a bloodless 1999 coup, to fulfill his promise to hold free and fair elections.

“It’s important for Pakistan to follow the path to democracy. The president believes that the path to democracy is the best path for all nations,” Fleischer told reporters.

Musharraf, who declared himself president in June 2001, announced several “irreversible” constitutional changes Wednesday, August 21, declaring that he did not need parliamentary approval.

Among the most controversial is the establishment of a powerful National Security Council comprising four military chiefs and eight civilian politicians who will oversee government and “foreign policy decisions and national issues.”

Washington’s policy toward Pakistan has been perceived by pro-democracy activists as tolerating controversial moves by Musharraf because of his key role in wiping out the Taliban and pursuing Al-Qaeda.

They came just ahead of Armitage’s second trip to Pakistan this year.

Armitage would convey U.S. concerns on democracy issues to Musharraf during talks here Saturday, after swinging through New Delhi, officials said.

“He’ll make sure that Musharraf understands our views. He’ll be sharing what’s already been said,” a U.S. embassy spokesman told AFP, declining to be named.

Armitage would also discuss the eight-month military standoff between Pakistan and India over the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir.

On Wednesday, the Pakistani leader, who also gave himself the power to sack an elected parliament, defended his National Security Council plan by saying that including the military in politics would prevent future coups.

“I say, if you want to keep the military out you have to get them in, and I mean every word of it,” said Musharraf, who also announced that he would remain both president and army chief for the next five years.

By sacking the national assembly, the prime minister and cabinet would also be automatically sacked.

Pakistani opposition parties, lawyers and rights groups cried foul Thursday, with some vowing to undo the changes after voters elect a new parliament on October 10.

The New York Time’s editorial on Friday branded Bush’s response “tepid ...embarrassing,” saying that any long-term strategy against terrorism must include “support for democracy throughout the Islamic world.”

The daily said Washington should remember that its uncritical support of military ruler Zia ul-Haq, during Pakistan’s drive against the occupying Soviet forces in the 1980s, allowed him to turn Pakistan “into a hotbed for Islamic extremists, including many Arabs who eventually found their way into Osama bin Laden’s terror network.”

Only hours after Bush’s reaction to Musharraf’s decision, U.S. Ambassador Nancy Powel in Islamabad signed an agreement Friday rescheduling payments on some three billion dollars in arrears and interest on debts owed by Pakistan to the United States as of November 2001.

At a signing ceremony attended by U.S. ambassador Powel and Waqar Masood Khan, additional secretary of Pakistan’s economic affairs department, the parties agreed to postpone repayments on 2.3 billion dollars of overseas development aid (ODA) loans until May, 2017.

The signing also formalized an earlier agreement which consolidates 700 million in non-ODA debt, postponing payments until May 2007.

Under its terms, Pakistan will be required to repay the 2.3 billion dollar ODA debt over 38 years at an unstated “average of originally agreed concessional rates”.

The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) pledged August 9 100 million dollars in education aid to Pakistan, one month after officially returning to the Islamic republic after a seven year absence.

The grant, to be disbursed over the next five years,  is the first official donation of U.S. humanitarian aid to Pakistan since sanctions were imposed in September 1995 in protest against Islamabad’s nuclear weapons program.

Washington has, however, given Islamabad un-programmed aid totaling about one billion dollars, including a 600 million dollar cash grant in November, since Bush lifted sanctions against Pakistan following the September 11 terror attacks, said USAID Pakistan Director Mark Ward.  

 

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