Pervez Musharraf, former Pakistani President, dies at 79

Former Pakistani President General Pervez Musharraf passes at Dubai hospital

Pervez Musharraf, former president general (retd), on Sunday died in a Dubai hospital, Geo News reported citing sources. He was 79. Musharraf had been undergoing treatment for an ailment at an American Hospital Dubai, the report added.

Musharraf was born on August 11, 1943, in Delhi and completed his early education at St Patrick’s High School in Karachi. The former president pursued higher education at Forman Christian College in Lahore.

Musharraf has been declared a fugitive in the former prime minister Benazir Bhutto murder case and Red Mosque cleric killing case. The former president, living in Dubai since 2016, was facing the treason case for suspending the Constitution in 2007.

The former military ruler had left for Dubai in March 2016 for medical treatment and had not returned since.

Musharraf had been hospitalised due to complications arising of the medical condition he is suffering from called amyloidosis, his family had informed in a Twitter message.

A rare disease, amyloidosis leads to abnormal deposition of some forms of proteins in various body tissues leading to organ damage.

Musharraf rose to national prominence after prime minister Nawaz Sharif promoted him to four-star general in 1998, making Musharraf the head of the armed forces. He led the Kargil infiltration, which triggered a war between India and Pakistan in 1999.

In 2020, the Lahore High Court declared “unconstitutional” all actions taken by the Nawaz Sharif government against Musharraf, including the filing of a complaint on high treason charge and the formation of a special court as well as its proceedings, leading to the abolition of the death penalty handed down to him by the trial court.

In 2019, a special court sentenced him to death. Musharraf came to power in a bloodless coup in 1999, deposing the then PM Nawaz Sharif. Facing impeachment following elections in 2008, Musharraf was forced to resign as president and went into self-imposed exile in Dubai.

Musharraf: Who came closest to Kashmir solution but also triggered Kargil war

General Pervez Musharraf, the former Pakistani military ruler who probably came closest to resolving the Kashmir issue with India but was also the main driver behind the cross-border intrusions that triggered the Kargil conflict, died following a prolonged illness on Sunday. He was 79.

The pugnacious and tough-talking four-star general, long a favourite with Indian TV news channels, came to power through a bloodless coup in 1999 that deposed the civilian government headed by prime minister Nawaz Sharif and tenaciously clung on to power, helping create the PML-Q party, before he was forced to resign in 2008 to avoid impeachment.

Musharraf, who was born in Old Delhi on August 11, 1943 to a career diplomat, rose through the ranks of the Pakistan Army – seeing action during the 1965 war and joining the Special Service Group – before he was appointed army chief by Sharif in October 1998.

Just weeks after then prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee visited Lahore in a bus at the invitation of Sharif to try to make a breakthrough in bilateral relations by signing the Lahore Declaration, Pakistani troops disguised as irregular fighters secretly infiltrated across the Line of Control (LoC) in Kargil sector, triggering a brief but fierce border conflict that ended disastrously for the Pakistani side. In addition to suffering huge casualties at the hands of the Indian army and air force, Pakistan was forced to withdraw its troops after then US president Bill Clinton threw his weight on the Indian side instead of brokering a peace deal as sought by Sharif.

The growing differences between Musharraf and Sharif prompted the premier to dismiss the army chief while he was on an official visit to Sri Lanka in October 1999 and to prevent the aircraft bringing Musharraf to Pakistan from landing at Karachi airport. The military rose up in support of Musharraf and took over all government installations, and Sharif was deposed in a coup. Sharif was forced into exile in Saudi Arabia as Musharraf declared himself the chief executive and began espousing a policy based on what he described as “enlightened moderation”. The poor performance of Sharif’s civilian government meant there were no public protests against the military takeover.

Just two years after the Kargil conflict, Musharraf accepted an invitation from Vajpayee for a summit in the Taj Mahal city of Agra in July 2001. Despite high expectations from the meeting, the talks collapsed soon after Musharraf’s grandstanding at a breakfast meeting with Indian journalists. Lingering suspicions about Musharraf among BJP leaders such as LK Advani are also believed to have played a part in this.

While Pakistan benefited from the liberalisation of its economy and the inflow of American aid after Musharraf joined the US-led war on terror following the 9/11 attacks by al-Qaeda, relations with India went through a series of ups and downs despite the military dictator’s commitment of January 2004 to not allow any territory under Pakistan’s control to be used for any form of terrorism.

Back channel contacts between Pakistan and India, under the governments of both Vajpayee and his successor Manmohan Singh, resulted in what has been described as Musharraf’s four point formula to settle the Kashmir issue. The formula envisaged making the LoC irrelevant by demilitarising both parts of Kashmir, allowing the free movement of people without any change of borders, permitting self-governance without independence and a joint mechanism for the management of Jammu and Kashmir.

Reported plans for the Kashmir deal to be finalised during a possible trip to Pakistan by Singh never materialised as Musharraf became embroiled in serious domestic political problems in 2007 that eroded his grip on power. This was primarily due to opposition from a powerful movement by lawyers and Pakistan’s Supreme Court to his plans to seek reelection as president while remaining army chief. The storming of the Lal Masjid in the heart of Islamabad by the army in July 2007 to remove Islamic fundamentalists triggered a devastating wave of suicide bombings across Pakistan that continued for several years, affecting the security situation and fuelling the rise of the Pakistani Taliban.

The Supreme Court thwarted Musharraf’s attempt to oust then chief justice Iftikhar Chaudhry, a development that further weakened the military ruler’s position. Former premier Benazir Bhutto returned to Pakistan from self-exile in October 2007 triggered another spell of confrontational politics ahead of proposed elections, and Musharraf imposed a state of emergency the following month. He suspended the Constitution and sacked chief justice Chaudhry before stuffing the superior courts with hand picked judges.

Bhutto’s assassination in December 2007 and the return of Sharif from exile helped their Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) and PML-N party emerge as the largest political forces following the general election in February 2008. Though Musharraf gave up the post of army chief even before the election, he faced growing pressure from the civilian government to quit. In August 2008, Musharraf resigned to avoid an impeachment motion by the PPP and PML-N, reflecting his growing lack of popularity within the army. Within months, he went into self-exile, dividing his time between Dubai and London.

In June 2010, Musharraf formed his own party, the All Pakistan Muslim League (APML), and announced plans to go back to Pakistan to contest elections, though his return was delayed till March 2013 because of a raft of legal cases involving serious charges such as treason and negligence that resulted in Bhutto’s assassination. Within weeks of Musharraf’s return, an election tribunal disqualified him from contesting elections and he was subsequently placed under house arrested in connection with the cases of treason and Bhutto’s assassination.

In March 2016, Musharraf was allowed to leave Pakistan to seek medical treatment and he again went into self-exile in Dubai. He largely disappeared from public view, though he kept appearing on Indian and Pakistani TV news channels to comment on a wide variety of issues.

Reports emerged in late 2018 that Musharraf’s health was rapidly deteriorating due to amyloidosis, a group of serious conditions caused by the build-up of an abnormal protein called amyloid in organs and tissues all over the body.

Kashmir is Bleeding, So is its Economy Previous post Kashmir is Bleeding, So is its Economy
The Resistance Front threatens to kill all involved in J&K eviction drive Next post The Resistance Front threatens to kill all involved in J&K eviction drive