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Silenced Pakistani Lawyer Is Speaking Out

by Henry Chu

LAHORE, PAKISTAN - For the first time in three months, Aitzaz Ahsan was back in his study Tuesday, surrounded by bound volumes of U.S. Supreme Court rulings, photos of himself clashing with riot police, and television cameras ready to catch his first words to the outside world after a long, enforced silence.0220 05

He wasted no time getting to the point.

“The best option for Musharraf is that he should quit,” Ahsan declared, referring to the man who had ordered him confined and muzzled since November.

That would be Pervez Musharraf, the president of Pakistan and now a severely weakened leader whose allies in the parliament were for the most part defeated at the polls Monday. The resounding defeat set off noisy celebrations across the country but also, more quietly, sprang the lock that had kept Ahsan under harsh conditions of house arrest.

A celebrated lawyer, Ahsan was shut away in jail and then in his home here for speaking out against Musharraf’s six-week emergency rule late last year and for defending Pakistan’s popular chief justice, whom the president had summarily dismissed.

The crackdown on Ahsan turned this distinguished, articulate man into a national hero, a prisoner of conscience whose confinement, in the eyes of many, symbolized the arrogance and highhandedness of Musharraf’s rule.

The first sign of easing restrictions on Ahsan came about 9 p.m. Monday when his cellphones began ringing after months of being blocked. Then, the official minders assigned to keep watch on him inside his home failed to turn up Tuesday morning, allowing him access to his study.

Although police still prevented him from venturing outside, by late afternoon Ahsan was besieged by journalists. He spent the next few hours adding to the swelling chorus demanding Musharraf’s resignation, warning the United States against underestimating public anger, reciting his own original poems and deprecating, without totally ruling out, the idea of being tapped to become prime minister in the expected new government.

During an interview at his home, Ahsan’s lawyerly, even tones, honed by years addressing the court, could not completely mask the anger behind some of his words.

“Musharraf is himself now the problem. He is not the solution,” he said. “I think all people who are his friends should advise him that this is the best time to bow out gracefully.”

Over the past six years, Musharraf, a former general who took power in a 1999 coup, has received unwavering support from the Bush administration, which considers him a key ally in the battle against Al Qaeda and the Taliban. But Ahsan said that Washington risked alienating the Pakistani people if it continued propping up a leader they soundly rejected at the polls.

“The West must see how singularly unpopular he is, and to try to sort of hold on to him and to help him retain his position, or to try to stitch together alliances supportive of [former] Gen. Musharraf, would mean that the West has learned nothing and is still going against the tide,” Ahsan said.

“We are with the West in the fight against terror, but the real weapon in that fight . . . is an empowered people with enforceable rights.”

Ahsan called it “staggering” that Western nations had failed to speak up for judges who were ordered removed last year by Musharraf, apparently out of fear they would rule his presidency invalid.

Anger over his interference in the judicial system propelled thousands of lawyers into the streets, with Ahsan often in the vanguard. When the president declared a state of emergency Nov. 3, Ahsan was among the first to be arrested.

Until Monday night, he was held virtually incommunicado, writing melancholy verse in Urdu “about the dreams we saw of a liberal, plural, democratic and peaceful society, which military and religious extremism has rent asunder and denied to us.”

Rumors are swirling that he could be a consensus choice for prime minister. Although Ahsan, a former senator, did not run for a parliament seat, it might legally be possible to appoint him as premier.

He said Tuesday that he supports another Pakistan People’s Party stalwart for the post. But ultimately, “who the prime minister will be will be decided by my party.”

“I hope there will be a Pakistan People’s Party prime minister. Second, I hope that the PPP and the other major political party . . . will see eye to eye and work as coalition partners. The third thing I wish to see is the restoration of the judges illegally thrown out by a military commander.

“That done,” the lawyer with the big agenda said with a laugh, “I want to take a three-month holiday.”

henry.chu@latimes.com

© 2008 The Los Angeles Times

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7 Comments so far

  1. AdeleTheCzech February 20th, 2008 12:51 pm

    This article is an upper. Also, I heard (either on CNN or MSNBC) last night that the extremist Islamic parties did poorly in the election. Haven’t find out HOW poorly yet, but any time they lose ground, it’s good news for Pakistan!

  2. Gail February 20th, 2008 7:57 pm

    “We are with the West in the fight against terror, but the real weapon in that fight . . . is an empowered people with enforceable rights.”

    We in the U.S. could replace “West” with “East” in this quote and be on the same page.

    Why isn’t our President of the American Bar Association Speaking out about enforcing “constitutional rights”?

  3. Tsunami February 20th, 2008 11:18 pm

    My question is, would he, or, could he be prosecuted (Pervez Musharraf) if he step down. He has been between a rock and a hard place since 9/11/01. Bush warned him that his country would be bombed back into the stone age if he didn’t support the so-called war on terror. So he went along to protect his country and people but appeared to be a puppet for the USA to the people.

    Musharraf was and is nothing more than a terrorist and thug; but Bush handed him ten billion dollars and declared him a dependable ally of the USA.

  4. Mikebbsjoke123 February 21st, 2008 12:31 am

    As the time period for the emergency seems to expire, the same feudal lords are about to grab the power seat in the upcoming elections.

  5. Bill BRG February 21st, 2008 1:00 am

    Lawyers with integrity and guts!

    Is this a good time to ask of the billions dissappeared, billions in no-bid & pork contracts? Or how much money from these and other hidden slush $ went to support undemocratic campaigns and self-servers?

    Lets start with Musharraf, Chalabi and the rest of the Iraqi appointees. All the way to eastern Europe and elsewhere.

  6. alan February 21st, 2008 8:29 am

    Seems to me that every world leader who has supported mr. bush has been kicked out by the people: Australia, Spain, Britain and a few others, now Pakastan. Soon to be Iraq and Afghanistan.

  7. citizen1 February 21st, 2008 8:31 pm

    It amazes me to see that folks in other countries still think that “the west” represents democracy and justice. Haven’t they learned anything?

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