The country’s top leadership and concerned authorities are reportedly in contact with the family for the funeral preparations. Once the aggrieved family has decided on the details, a formal announcement will be made. Reacting to the news, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif offered his condolences on the former army chief’s demise. Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said that the Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee (CJCSC) General Sahir Shamshad, and tri-services chiefs also expressed heartfelt condolences on Musharraf’s death.
“CJCSC and services chiefs express heartfelt condolences on the sad demise of General Pervez Musharraf, former president, CJCSC and chief of army staff. May Allah bless the departed soul and give strength to the bereaved family,” the military’s media wing said. Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Senior Vice President Fawad Chaudhry offered his condolences, saying: “Musharraf was a great person […], ‘Pakistan first’ was his theory and vision.”
Former Punjab chief minister Parvez Elahi, while pouring in condolences, said that Musharraf’s services to the Pakistan Army and the country cannot be forgotten. Expressing deep sorrow over the former president’s death, Chairman Senate Muhammad Sadiq Sanjrani said that he shares his grief with the bereaved family. Musharraf was born on Aug. 11, 1943, in the Indian capital New Delhi. Musharraf’s family moved to Pakistan’s southern city of Karachi after the birth of Pakistan in 1947. His father, Syed Musharrafuddin, was an accounts officer.
After joining the Pakistan Army in 1964, Musharraf went on to fight in the 1965 and 1971 Pak-India wars and was a graduate of the Army Staff and Command College, Quetta. Musharraf was also the “main architect” of the Kargil war between Pakistan and India in 1999. The war took place months after then-Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif had signed a peace accord with his Indian counterpart Atal Bihari Vajpayee in Lahore. Musharraf assumed the post of Chief Executive after imposing martial law in the country in 1999 in a bloodless coup after Nawaz Sharif tried to dismiss him as army chief, having appointed him above more senior officers a year earlier. In 2002, he forced then-President Rafiq Tarar to resign and declared himself president.
The four-star general served as the president of Pakistan from 2001 to 2008. He ruled the country under the backdrop of the 9/11 attacks on the US and swiftly aligned with Washington during its military intervention in neighbouring Afghanistan. In more than seven years in office, he oversaw a stint of economic growth while dodging at least three assassination attempts. Musharraf won a five-year term as president in a 2002 referendum but reneged on promises to quit as army chief until late 2007. Although he was a military dictator, he, nonetheless introduced some key reforms, including reserved seats for women and minorities, and the introduction of a powerful local bodies system and allowing a rush of news channels to dot Pakistan’s media landscape. These reforms were retained by successive democratic governments.
His easygoing charm however failed to mask the blurring of the division between the state and army, and he fell out of favour after trying to sack then-chief justice Iftikhar Chaudhry. Remembered as the “Lawyers Movement”, a major resistance against Musharraf’s rule was triggered by the top judge’s challenge to the legality of Musharraf’s dual role as president and Army Chief. Though after massive rallies brought Chaudhry back into office on July 20, 2007, Musharraf reverted to trying to take back control of things only months later as he imposed an emergency, suspending the Constitution in Pakistan. As the lawyer’s resistance grew larger, about 97 senior judges were immediately fired and detained for refusing to accept the emergency rule.
After the December 2007 assassination of opposition leader Benazir Bhutto, the national mood soured even more, and the crushing losses his allies suffered in 2008 elections left him isolated. Musharraf’s plan to return to power in 2013 was dashed when he was disqualified from running in an election won by Nawaz — the man he had deposed in 1999.
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