Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf, who has ruled the country for about seven years, is 'determined' to retain his dual role as President and Army Chief of Staff for 'years to come,' a media report said, quoting people close to him.
Musharraf also plans to seek re-election for a second five-year term from the present parliament which he controls rather than the freshly elected one next year as his people do not want to take any chances, the report said.
'Our problem is just the usual vulnerabilities of incumbency,' Pakistan Muslim League secretary general Mushahid Hussain told Newsweek magazine, rejecting the suggestion that newly elected parliament next year will be the appropriate body for re-electing the President.
'Why shouldn't the same parliament elect the President twice for ten years,' he asked, denying that the government is engaged in any wrongdoing. The President is elected by both houses of parliament and the four provincial assemblies.
But Musharraf's critics, the report said, charge that if he seeks re-election form the current parliament, it will demonstrate that he and his military do not trust free and fair elections.
'Musharraf is increasingly seen by people as being more interested in perpetuating himself in power than in anything else,' retired Pakistani Army Lt Gen Talat Masood told Newsweek. 'If he is re-elected by this Parliament,
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