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Pressure mounts but Musharraf won't quit: spokesman

August 14, 2008 00:00:00


ISLAMABAD (Agencies): Pressure mounted on Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf on Wednesday to resign or face impeachment but aides rejected media speculation he was about to step down.

Sindh provincial assembly Wednesday passed a resolution against Musharraf.

The resolution asked Musharraf to take a vote of confidence or resign, said the report.

The Punjab and North West Frontier Province provincial assemblies also passed resolutions demanding that Musharraf take confidence vote.

Musharraf has been at the centre of a political crisis since early last year that has raised fears among the United States and its allies for the stability of the nuclear-armed Muslim country, which is also a hiding place for al Qaeda leaders.

The ruling coalition government, led by the party of assassinated former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, said last week it aimed to impeach the former army chief and firm U.S. ally for years of misrule.

Speculation has been rife that Musharraf, who seized power in a 1999 coup, would quit rather than face impeachment.

Politicians across the country have been calling on him to face a vote of confidence or be impeached.

The Daily Times newspaper cited an unidentified politician from a pro-Musharraf party as saying the president would announce a decision to quit on Independence Day on Thursday.

But Musharraf's spokesman denied the report.

"Newspapers in Pakistan, I'm afraid, dream up things then start writing about them. There's no such thing," said the spokesman, retired Major General Rashid Qureshi.


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