Supreme Court dismisses challenges to Musharraf's rule
Last Updated: Monday, November 19, 2007 | 1:38 PM ET
CBC News
Pakistan's new government-selected Supreme Court judges dismissed legal challenges to President Gen. Pervez Musharraf's continued rule Monday.
Opposition figures denounced the court as lacking credibility because the tribunal was stripped of independent judges as one of the first acts by Musharraf after he established emergency rule on Nov. 3.
The judges struck down several challenges to Musharraf's right to have run for re-election while still army chief.
Opponents had argued that he ought to have been disqualified under a constitutional ban on public servants running for elected office, which they said applied because Musharraf was still army chief.
The move paves the way for Musharraf to step down as army chief. He had vowed earlier to remove his uniform and be sworn in as a civilian president for his next five-year term if the court cleared his Oct. 6 re-election.
Opposition petitions withdrawn
Chief Justice Abdul Hameed Dogar dismissed three opposition petitions challenging Musharraf's victory. Two were "withdrawn" because opposition lawyers were not present in court, he said, and the third was withdrawn by a lawyer for the party of opposition leader Benazir Bhutto, who suggested the court was illegitimate.
"We asked for [the case] to be postponed because we said there is no constitution," Bhutto told reporters in Karachi.
The court said it will rule on another petition Thursday and only after that can the judges authorize the election commission to announce Musharraf as the winner of the vote.
The petition is from a man whose candidacy for the presidential election was rejected by the election commission.
Critics say Musharraf's Nov. 3 clampdown, which led to widespread political turmoil, came days ahead of a Supreme Court decision that would have found his re-election illegal.
However, one observer, Qamar-ul Huda, a senior program officer at the United States Institute of Peace in Washington, told CBC News the judges' decisions are viewed as very serious ones.
"People do want to portray them as puppets and portray them as non-independents," he said. "But historically those picked for the Supreme Court positions, they're well known in the country and within the system, and they're scholars who read the law very thoroughly."
Emergency rule in Pakistan's 'best interest'
The United States has called for emergency rule to end before the parliamentary elections take place, and for Musharraf to end his dual role as president and army chief.
With pressure growing for the country to return to democracy, the government announced Monday that the election will take place Jan. 8.
Musharraf has insisted emergency rule powers, enacted to help the government curb Islamic extremism, will not be lifted unless the situation improves.
Huda said it'll be interesting to see which political figures emerge in the upcoming election.
"The subtext of this emergency rule is to see who surfaces within this process — who surfaces as pro-Western, who surfaces as moderate...," he said.
Musharraf again defended the state of emergency, on Sunday at a ceremony to inaugurate a bridge in the southern port city of Karachi.
"I took this decision in the best interest of Pakistan," he told the state news agency. "I could have said thank you and walked away. But this was not the right approach because I cannot watch this country go down in front of me after so many achievements and such an economic turnaround."
Thousands of protesters, including many opposition party members, have been arrested since the imposition of emergency rule.
With files from the Associated PressShare Tools
Top News Headlines
- Employment Insurance review boards to be scrapped
- The federal government is scrapping two review boards used by people appealing decisions made about their employment insurance. more »
- Teens share bullying tales in confession booth
- Raw stories about bullying emerged when a video booth was set up inside a Quebec high school. more »
- Serial carjacker gets life term for fatal crash
- An Ontario judge was moved to tears while delivering a life prison sentence to a serial carjacker who killed a woman and injured five others after driving a stolen van into her car during a 2010 police chase. more »
- Canada ending 'Buffalo shuffle' for visas, closing consulate
- The federal government is shutting the Canadian consulate in Buffalo less than two years after costly renovations, while dropping a requirement for visas to be renewed outside the country, CBC News has learned. more »
Latest World News Headlines
- Canadian restrained on flight to Miami arrested
- A 24-year-old Canadian man is in federal custody for rushing toward the front of an American Airlines flight from Jamaica after the plane landed in Miami. more »
- Reclaiming the dead on Mt. Everest

- The difficulty, danger and expense of removing the bodies of climbers who died in Mount Everest's "death zone" mean most of the dead remain on the mountain as a stark reminder to other climbers of the risks. more »
- Suspect in Etan Patz death charged with murder
- A New Jersey man accused of luring six-year-old Etan Patz into a New York City convenience store in 1979 and killing him has been charged with second-degree murder. more »
- Unloading of docked SpaceX capsule to start Saturday
- The privately bankrolled SpaceX Dragon capsule made a historic arrival at the International Space Station on Friday, and astronauts will begin unloading some of the 544 kilograms of food, water, clothing and other supplies its carrying starting Saturday. more »
Dispatches »
- Foreign slaves serving the U.S. military machine May. 24, 2012 3:33 PM How does a hairdresser recruited for work in Dubai, wind up slaving for the U.S. military in a war zone in Iraq? There are tens of thousands serving in what's come to be known as America's "Invisible Army."
Connect Newsroom Blog
Etan Patz Arrest, Helene Campbell & Facebook Flop May. 24, 2012 8:54 PM Three decades after a U.S. child Etan Patz disappeared, an arrest has finally been made.
- Aylmer triple stabbing leads to first-degree murder charges
- Everest victim's family asks for government help
- Reclaiming the dead on Mt. Everest
- Employment Insurance review boards to be scrapped
- Teens share bullying tales in confession booth
- Canada ending 'Buffalo shuffle' for visas, closing consulate
- Double-lung recipient dances on Ellen show
- Brave cat makes epic leap of faith
- Conservatives move again to have robocalls suits tossed

