
Musharraf who came in as a general than became more of a politician is now turning into a dictator. The serious event that Pakistan experienced recently over the sacking of CJ Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry has been looked upon an attempt to docile the judiciary before elections this year and this blunder have not only posed threat to Musharraf’s credibility to engage with the world but also further challenges have bordered him in order to bring stability to the country.
The storm has risen on the Pakistani political horizon, the society is in ferment again, and the rising voices of dissent are sharpening the confrontation as the police detained hundreds of political opposition members in an attempt to thwart nationwide protests planned for Monday to denounce Gen. Pervez Musharraf’s suspension of the chief justice.
Now the writing on the wall seems clearer that there’s nothing left with Musharraf to offer that would place Pakistan on the right track, except putting the final nail in Pakistan’s coffin.
But surely one thing is worth mentioning here, the way Judiciary and the nation has responded shows that there is some spark left in this more or less dead nation which can turn a great fire and regain its lost status by kicking off the one who is trying to save his uniform and drifting the nation into pieces.











Comments
I think India has democracy in true sense - atleast far better than Pak is having at the moment.
Aftab
www.indiademocracy.com