Musharraf calls for reconciliation

14 Aug, 2008

President Pervez Musharraf, who is under mounting pressure to resign, called on Thursday for political stability and reconciliation to tackle economic and security problems. Musharraf, speaking in a televised Independence Day address, did not refer to a plan to impeach him drawn up by a coalition government.
"If we want to put our economy on the right track and fight terrorism then we need political stability. Unless we bring political stability, I think we can't fight them properly," Musharraf said. "Political stability, in my view, can only be brought through a reconciliation approach as opposed to confrontation," he said. "This is the need of the hour."
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.
Speculation has been rife that Musharraf, who seized power in a 1999 coup, would quit rather than face impeachment. A growing number of politicians across the country, including some old allies, have been calling on him to face a vote of confidence or be impeached.
The prospect of a showdown is unnerving investors, with the rupee setting a new low of around 75.05/15 to the dollar and stocks hovering near two-year lows. Security worries are compounding the gloom. Musharraf spoke just after midnight, when Pakistan marked the anniversary of its creation in 1947 upon the partition of British-ruled India.
Shortly before noisy celebrations began across the country, a suicide bomb attack on police killed at least six people in the eastern city of Lahore, police said.

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