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Nawaz pulls out of cabinet, to give outside support

Islamabad, May 12: Pakistan slipped into a political crisis after the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) Monday decided to pull out of the cabinet following failure of talks with coalition partner Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) over the restoration of judges sacked by President Pervez Musharraf last year.

Former prime minister and PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif told reporters here that his MPs would continue to sit in the treasury benches and support the government from outside.

Monday was the last day of the deadline to restore the judges of the superior judiciary. The coalition partners have failed to resolve the issue, despite marathon talks in Dubai last month and in London over the weekend.

The PPP has said it would restore the sacked judges through a package as per the constitution in due course and expressed the hope that the PML-N would return to the cabinet after that. The PPP said it would continue to support the PML-N government in Punjab province.

Pakistan's fragile ruling coalition was facing collapse after a US official's last-ditch mediation on Sunday failed to help break the deadlock on reinstating judges and the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) was set to withdraw its ministers from the cabinet.
"We are left with no option but to pull out of the cabinet... but we will continue to support the PPP government and would continue to be part of the coalition," a PML-N leader told IANS in Islamabad as former prime minister Nawaz Sharif and other party leaders left London for Islamabad.

Assistant Secretary of State for South Asia Richard Boucher made an unscheduled stopover in London to meet Sharif and PPP chief Asif Ali Zardari. He was on his way home from Bangladesh.

The US mediation effort came after Sharif and Zardari failed to reach agreement after seven hours of talks Saturday on the issue - talks that were joined by Pakistan's ambassador-designate to Washington, Hussain Haqqani.

Both sides confirmed that Boucher held meetings with Sharif and Zardari but denied that they discussed the issue during their separate meetings.

"Yes, I met Boucher on his request and we discussed bilateral issues. I cannot even think of discussing our internal matters with leaders of any other country," Sharif told reporters at Heathrow airport before flying back to Islamabad where he is scheduled to head his party's meeting before making the final announcement on the next move.
Sharif said his party would still wait for any announcement from PPP till May 12 evening, the deadline set for restoration of about 60 judges of superior courts sacked by President Pervez Musharraf when he imposed emergency.

"We will not totally part ways with PPP, we would continue to talk to them on case to case basis, but we have to think on our party lines as well," Sharif's younger brother Shahbaz Sharif told the ARY television in London hinting that the party will quit the federal cabinet.

Earlier, the April 30 deadline was extended after PPP sought more time. The two leaders had held extended rounds of talks in Dubai to resolve their differences.

Before Sharif's press conference, the PML-N federal ministers had reached their party meeting without their official cars.



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