A special Pakistani court on Monday indicted former military ruler Pervez Musharraf on five counts of high treason, a charge that potentially carries the death penalty and comes as a sharp blow to the country’s powerful military.
The development is the first time that an acting or former army chief has been indicted for treason in Pakistan, where the military has taken power in three coups since the country was founded in 1947.
The indictment — the latest high drama in a series of legal cases Musharraf has faced since returning to Pakistan a little over a year ago — also showcases the tensions between a civilian government that initiated the case and the military, which has generally been above the law.
Musharraf, who appeared in court on Monday for only the second time in the lengthy court proceedings that began in December, pleaded not guilty to all five counts and delivered a nearly 30-minute defense of his time in office.
The former general, who has been at a hospital in the nearby city of Rawalpindi after complaining of chest pains on his way to a court session in January, said he was appearing in the proceeding against the advice of his medical team.
The judges in the case were expected to rule Monday on a defense motion to allow Musharraf to leave the country to see his ailing mother in Dubai, in a development that could see the former military ruler leave the country. The three-judge tribunal was constituted just to deal with the treason case.
“I am being called a traitor,” he said. “I put the country on the path of progress after 1999 when the country was being called a failed and a defaulted state.”
“Is this the way to reward someone for being loyal to the country and for loving the country?” Musharraf asked the court.
If convicted, Musharraf could face the death penalty but it remains unclear whether the trial will ever get that far. Musharraf’s lawyers have been requesting that he be allowed to leave the country for medical treatment.
On Monday, his lawyer Farogh Naseem again requested that Musharraf be allowed to leave Pakistan, this time to visit his mother.
“The mother is dying, for God’s sake,” said Naseem. “He will come back. He wants to face the trial. He wants his name to be cleared.”
The prosecutor, Akram Sheikh, expressed sympathy for Musharraf, and while he didn’t say whether the former military ruler should be allowed to leave the country, he didn’t object either.
After the proceedings were finished, the prosecutor, who has often been part of testy exchanges between the prosecution and defense, walked up to Musharraf, greeted him warmly and the two chatted briefly as dozens of security personnel, lawyers and journalists looked on.
The indictment had been expected back in December when the court first met at the National Library that has served as a courtroom for the high-profile trial. But Musharraf repeatedly failed to appear in court — first due to security concerns and then due to the health scare — leading to speculation that he was trying to avoid the embarrassing experience of subjecting himself to a civilian court.
Musharraf finally appeared in court on Feb. 18 but was not indicted because the judges decided to rule on a defense challenge to whether they had jurisdiction in the case or not. Once that was settled the judges pushed to have Musharraf appear in court so the charges could be read and the trial proceed, even issuing an arrest warrant requiring he be in attendance on Monday.
Security was tight Monday. All traffic near the courtroom was shut down to allow Musharraf’s convoy to travel. Paramilitary Rangers and police took up positions inside the courtroom.
Musharraf’s rush to a military hospital in early January sparked speculation that the military was moving to protect him and that he would soon leave the country under guise of receiving medical treatment.
Musharraf took power in a 1999 coup but was forced to step down in 2008. The high treason case stems from his decision to suspend the constitution on Nov. 3 2007 and detain a number of judges. The move backfired and led to widespread protests by the country’s powerful legal community. Eventually, Musharraf stepped down and left the country.
Musharraf said Monday that he did not subvert the constitution and that his actions had been taken on the advice of the prime minister and the cabinet.
He returned to Pakistan last March with the hope of running in the national election held in May. But he was disqualified and has spent most of his time since battling legal cases.
The other cases facing Musharraf involve his alleged role in the murder of former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, the death of a Baluch separatist leader killed by the army, the killing of a radical cleric and the detention of Pakistani judges. But the treason case is by far the most serious.
(AP)
One Response
This could give seizing the government a bad name. In much of the world, “president” is what generals do, and rarely does it involve an election. It should be noted that in the United States the last time the military seized the government was in the 17th century (and America was just a dinky colony of England back then).