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Published 27 Jan, 2012 10:03pm

Musharraf delays homecoming

DUBAI, Jan 27: Former president Gen (retd) Pervez Musharraf has delayed his return home after repeated threats by the country’s leadership that he will be arrested upon arrival.

“He finally decided today that he would accept the recommendations” of the executive committee of the All Pakistan Muslim League to delay his return, party secretary general Mohammed Ali Saif told reporters here on Friday.

“This decision (of returning) will be deliberated by the core committee of the party,” he said.

Friends and supporters had urged Gen Musharraf to put off an imminent homecoming after Islamabad said he would be arrested if he returned from more than three years of self-imposed exile in London and Dubai.

Mr Saif said that “political developments in Pakistan took a turn” following Gen Musharraf’s announcement in early January of his intention to return by the end of the month.

Reaction from government officials “led to a change in the political scenario and... a drastic change in the situation”, he said. The party has concluded that “it would not be beneficial to the party’s interest that (former) president Musharraf returns to Pakistan” in the current conditions, he added.

Mr Saif said the recommendations from party deliberations urged Mr Musharraf, who is currently in Dubai, to postpone his return home “until the situation in Pakistan becomes conducive to the return”.

“We have come to the conclusion that if the former president returns to Pakistan in this existing scenario this will in a way provide an escape route for our political opposition,” he said, citing confrontations between parties of the existing political set-up.

“They would target his person through various means, and would try to divert public attention from there own problems,” he said.

Gen Musharraf had promised to fly home to contest general elections just as Pakistan’s government sank deeper into a major crisis, squeezed by the military and the judiciary.

His pledge met with repeated threats of his arrest, most recently by Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani who, speaking to CNN earlier on Friday, assured that Musharraf would be ‘certainly’ arrested if he flew home.

Gen Musharraf faces two court warrants for his arrest in connection with the 2006 murder of Akbar Bugti, a Baloch nationalist leader, and the 2007 assassination of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto after her own homecoming.

In an interview broadcast on BBC radio earlier this month, Gen Musharraf acknowledged he would be in danger in Pakistan. “I do feel endangered. There is a danger certainly, but you take your own protection and then leave things to destiny. Nobody can ensure you 100 per cent protection,” he said.—AFP

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