Hundreds of lawyers and political activists began a cross-country rally on Wednesday to press the new government to restore deposed judges President Pervez Musharraf fired. Lawyers have been at the forefront of a campaign against staunch US ally Musharraf since he tried to dismiss the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, Iftikhar Chaudhry, last year.
Iftikhar Chaudhry and dozens of other judges were purged after Musharraf declared emergency rule in November. The rally, dubbed a "long march" though the lawyers are travelling in a motor convoy, set off from the south-eastern city of Multan bound for Islamabad, where they are due on Friday.
Iftikhar Chaudhry addressed the lawyers before they left, calling for the independence of the judiciary in a country where all rulers have interfered with the legal system. "If the courts are allowed to work independently than I assure you, this country ... does not need to worry about any danger," Chaudhry told about 1,500 lawyers and activists, most from the party of former prime minister Nawaz Sharif.
The protest will increase pressure on Musharraf to step down. He has been isolated since his allies were trounced in a February election. Opponents are demanding he quit and face trial. It is also a challenge to the coalition government led by the party of slain former prime minister Benazir Bhutto and a threat to the coalition's tenuous unity.
Both the government and lawyers have vowed to keep the peace, with the government saying the lawyers have the right to protest. But in a nuclear-armed country plagued by militant bombings and other violence, trouble cannot be ruled out. Sixteen people were killed in a bomb attack on lawyers' protest in Islamabad in July last year.
Pakistani stocks, rattled by political worries recently, were higher ahead of a budget announcement later in the day. Analysts say it is not clear how much support the rally will get from ordinary Pakistanis struggling with surging fuel and food inflation and power cuts. Protests over prices have erupted and that anger could bolster support for the lawyers.
Some Multan residents said they backed the lawyers but Mohammad Asghar said he didn't: "These rallies just create disturbances for the public who are more worried about prices." The lawyers plan to hold a sit-in in front of parliament in Islamabad, where paramilitary troops were deployed at government buildings and shipping containers were placed across a main road leading to the assembly.
Sharif's party, the second biggest in the coalition, is taking part in the rally because it says Bhutto's party has been dragging its feet over the restoration of the judges.
Sharif said he would join the protest in Lahore on Thursday. "Please note my words: Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry and 60 other judges will be restored," he told a news conference. "Democracy will win and dictatorship will face a humiliating defeat."
Asif Ali Zardari, who has led Benazir party since her assassination in December, says he wants the judges restored through constitutional changes, but those might take months to introduce.
Comments
Comments are closed.