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Sunday, June 3, 2007

Ousted Pakistan judge evokes ‘people power’

ABBOTTABAD, Pakistan (AFP) - Pakistan’s top judge, suspended by President Pervez Musharraf, has told thousands of supporters that the country’s people back the struggle for the independence of the judiciary.

Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry led a procession from Islamabad to the northwestern city of Abbottabad on Saturday, greeted by roadside protesters chanting “Go Musharraf, go.” The weight of the crowds periodically halted the motorcade.

(Article continues after photo caption.)
Photo

A crowd of people cool off in a canal in Lahore, Pakistan, where the temperature reached 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit), Sunday, June 3, 2007. Many cities in Pakistan are facing heatwave conditions with temperatures reaching 44 degree Celsius (111.2 Fahrenheit) in some place. (AP Photo/K M Chaudhry)
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He told the crowd of around 25,000 lawyers and opposition activists in the conservative hill resort that the legal community was not alone.

“The people of Pakistan are with you. In the eyes of the law all citizens are equals,” he said to his supporters after the 100-kilometre (60-mile) journey.

“It is the basic responsibility of the courts to protect the fundamental rights of the people, especially the higher judiciary,” he said.

“The courts have rejected human rights violations in the past.”

Musharraf suspended Chaudhry on allegations of misconduct on March 9, sparking violent protests in the southern city of Karachi that left more than 40 people dead.

Musharraf is facing the greatest crisis of his eight-year rule. The protest on Saturday was the latest in a series.

Critics say Musharraf acted to ensure a pliant judiciary if, as expected, he tries to remain as army chief past the end of 2007, when the constitution says he must quit.

Pakistan’s fractious opposition movement has united around Chaudhry’s cause in a campaign calling for a return to full democracy and an end to military rule.

Witnesses said some 5,000 opposition workers and lawyers greeted Chaudhry at the ancient town of Taxila on his route to Abbottabad.

Another 15,000 welcomed the judge at the town of Haripur, they said, adding the boisterous crowds waved flags and chanted slogans condemning Musharraf and the military’s involvement in politics.

“We are fighting for the independence of the judiciary and we have the support of the people of Pakistan,” Chaudhry’s lawyer, Aitzaz Ahsan, told the crowd in Haripur.

The motorcade took 11 hours to reach its destination. It is usually a two-hour journey from Islamabad.

People also stood on the rooftops around the venue where Chaudhry was to address lawyers in Abbottabad, witnesses said. As the procession entered the venue the crowd burst into sustained applause, raising anti-Musharraf slogans.

The procession came a day after Pakistan’s top army commanders reaffirmed their full support for Musharraf in the face of what they called attempts by a minority to “derail the nation from the path of progress.”

Chaudhry’s previous rallies were televised live by private domestic television channels, but none broadcast the motorcade after warnings from the government.

One private television station, the Karachi-based Aaj TV, said it had been told not to cover the procession.

“We have received a notice from the Pakistan Electronic and Media Regulatory Authority that we cannot show live coverage from any place other than what is specified in our licence,” said Talat Hussain, the station’s news director.

But Information Minister Mohammad Ali Durrani denied the government had barred live coverage.

“I am not aware of any restrictions on media,” Durrani told AFP.

The government was incensed when lawyers attending a pro-Chaudhry rally at the Supreme Court in Islamabad a week ago shouted slogans condemning Musharraf and the army’s role in politics.

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