Musharraf allies headed for defeat in Pakistan vote
By Zeeshan Haider
ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - The main party that backs Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf was headed for defeat on Tuesday after voters rallied to the opposition, raising questions about the future of the U.S. ally who has ruled since 1999.
As president, former army chief Musharraf did not contest Monday's parliamentary elections aimed at completing a transition to civilian rule, but the outcome could seal his fate.
A hostile parliament could try to remove Musharraf, who took power as a general in a 1999 coup and emerged as a crucial U.S. ally in a "war on terror" that most Pakistanis think is Washington's, not theirs.
The election was relatively peaceful after a bloody campaign and opposition fears of rampant rigging by Musharraf's supporters appeared unfounded.
The election was postponed from January 8 after the assassination of former prime minister and opposition leader Benazir Bhutto in a suicide attack on December 27.
The death of Bhutto, the most progressive, Western-friendly politician in a Muslim nation rife with anti-American sentiment, raised concern about the stability of the nuclear-armed country.
Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party (PPP) has been expected to reap a sympathy vote after her murder but some analysts said the decisive factor in the election was Musharraf.
In a major blow for the Pakistan Muslim League (PML) which backs Musharraf, its president, Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain, a former prime minister, was defeated in his Punjab province constituency by a rival from Bhutto's party, television networks said, citing unofficial Election Commission tallies.
Several other prominent PML members, including ministers in Musharraf's outgoing government, lost their seats, television stations reported.
"The PML could not save itself from Musharraf's unpopularity," newspaper editor Mjeeb-ur-Rehman told Geo Television.
Musharraf's ratings have plunged over the past year, particularly after he imposed six weeks of emergency rule and purged the judiciary.
Many Pakistanis also blame him and his PML-led government for rising prices, food shortages and power cuts.
Full unofficial election results are expected later on Tuesday.
"ACCEPT THE RESULTS"
Musharraf said on Monday he would work with whoever won to build democracy in a country that has alternated between civilian and army rule throughout its 60-year history. Continued...









