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Former Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif was arrested Monday at Islamabad’s airport on corruption charges.
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Deporting Sharif may weaken Pakistan's President Musharraf

The former Pakistani Prime Minister was arrested and deported Monday at Islamabad's airport on corruption charges.

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Reporter Mian Ridge discusses the impact of Sharif's deportation on Pakistani politics and the government of President Musharraf.

Nawaz Sharif: An unlikely hero

Sharif, who led Pakistan twice in the 1990s, was toppled in a bloodless coup by Musharraf in 1999 and sentenced to prison on charges of corruption that had long dogged his leadership. But his sentence was commuted in 2000 in a deal brokered by the Saudi royal family. On August 23, Pakistan's Supreme Court ruled that he could fly home.

Shortly after his plane touched down in Pakistan's capital, Islamabad, after departing London on Sunday night, Sharif was arrested in the airport's VIP lounge over corruption and money laundering charges. A short while later, with tears in his eyes, he was unceremoniously plunked onto a plane to Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

Many believe Sharif's arrest and deportation will backfire on Musharraf.

"Sharif's popularity will surge now, because he will be seen as a symbol of resistance to Musharraf," says Rizvi.

Musharraf turned to Ms. Bhutto in the hope that a power-sharing deal would buy him some legitimacy and help him overcome constitutional hurdles to remaining in power.

As Bhutto entered talks with Musharraf, Sharif positioned himself as an independent defender of democracy who would never do business with a military leader. This, despite the fact that Sharif also rose to power with the support of a military ruler, General Zia ul-Huq.

Bhutto, meanwhile, needs Musharraf to drop the many pending corruption charges against her, allowing her to return and fight elections. She also wants Pakistani presidents stripped of the power to dismiss governments and for Musharraf to shed his Army uniform.

In return, her Pakistan People's Party (PPP) would help clear the way for him to run for reelection as president.

Such a deal has been strongly encouraged by the United States and other Western allies in the hope that it would bring stability to Pakistan and help in the fight against terrorism. But it is more likely, say analysts, that US support for talks between Bhutto and Musharraf will only bolster opposition to Musharraf.

This is partly due to amplified anti-American sentiments following Pakistan's cooperation with the US after 9/11. While Bhutto has courted American approval of a pact with Musharraf, Sharif has been cheered in Pakistan for his perceived independence.

'Out of the loop' under Musharraf

Masood, the analyst and retired Army general, says that opposition to Musharraf has become a more potent force in Pakistan than anti-Americanism.

"There's been a feeling against Musharraf that has been getting stronger for some time," he says. "People here, whether they are poor or middle class, complain they have no sense of participation in politics, that they feel completely out of the loop."

There was also, he added, some of "the old anti-incumbency factor at play" behind Musharraf's deep unpopularity.

Musharraf's party, the Pakistan Muslim League-Q, or PML-Q, which was stitched together from remnants of Sharif's party in 1999, has already suffered a raft of defections, and analysts say Sharif's treatment will spark more.

Observers also warn that anti-Musharraf demonstrations are likely to be met with considerable force.

On Sunday, police reportedly detained at least 2,000 members of his party in Pakistan, including its chairman. They blocked all roads into the airport using large vehicles and barbed wire, apparently to prevent the large welcome of which Sharif's party had boasted before his departure. Elsewhere in the city, they fired tear gas at Sharif supporters.

"Worryingly," says Masood, "it seems likely that the government will continue to use force to trample the opposition, as was evident before Sharif's arrival."

 

Nawaz Sharif

• 1949: Born into a prominent industrialist family in Lahore. Sharif first becomes active in politics as a member of the Punjab Provincial Council.

• 1985: Becomes chief minister of Punjab after sweeping the local assembly elections.

• 1990: Becomes prime minister, but is dismissed within three years after repeated clashes with president. Rival Benazir Bhutto succeeds him.

• 1997: Reelected prime minister with a strong majority. Almost immediately, he brings in constitutional amendments to remove checks to his power.

• 1999: General Musharraf overthrows Sharif in a bloodless military coup.

• 2000: Goes into exile in Saudi Arabia to avoid life imprisonment on hijacking and corruption charges.

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