Musharraf wants harmony with top judge
August 02, 2007 00:00:00
ISLAMABAD, Aug 1 (AFP): President Pervez Musharraf has said he wants "harmonious ties" with Pakistan's chief justice, whose suspension by the military ruler was overturned earlier this month in a major political blow.
Musharraf said he accepted a July 20 Supreme Court verdict that reinstated top judge Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry. Chaudhry's fightback against his March ouster turned him into an icon of opposition to the embattled president.
In his first public comments on the case, Musharraf said he had personal relations with Chaudhry dating from before the judicial crisis erupted in March.
"We had family ties and hope to maintain same harmonious ties in future," the official Associated Press of Pakistan quoted Musharraf as telling a ceremony late Tuesday at the offices of state-run Pakistan Television.
"I accept the judgement of the judiciary and honour it," the president said.
But in an apparent swipe at Chaudhry's high-profile campaign to win back his job, Musharraf said that "personal egos" should not be involved in national matters and that the judiciary should not be politicised.
Chaudhry's supporters say Musharraf tried to oust the independent-minded judge because he wanted a pliant judiciary, which he hoped would allow him to defy the constitution and stay on as president-in-uniform past the end of 2007.
General elections are also due in Pakistan by early 2008.
Analysts have said that Chaudhry's reinstatement could open the floodgates for legal challenges against Musharraf's dual position as army chief and president, and also against alleged electoral irregularities.