Pakistan arrests more opposition, eyes on Bhutto
ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Pakistani authorities arrested a top leader of exiled former prime minister Nawaz Sharif's party and several other opposition figures on Sunday in a countrywide crackdown after President Pervez Musharraf imposed emergency rule.
"Musharraf's days are numbered. The time has come to end the political role of the army," Javed Hashmi, acting president of the Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz), told reporters before being whisked away by police in the central city of Multan.
Tariq Mehmood, a leading anti-Musharraf lawyer, said most lawyers opposed to the military ruler were under house arrest or detained.
"It's the second takeover of the country by General Musharraf since 1999. He has not imposed emergency rule but has imposed martial law," Mehmood told Reuters from a police station where he was detained.
Police placed leading opposition figure and former cricket star Imran Khan under house arrest early on Sunday after he urged Pakistanis to take to the streets.
Khan told CNN Musharraf was to blame for Pakistan's problems and said emergency rule would not help.
"He never said how is he, through the emergency, going to do things that are any different. He was the absolute ruler, he had absolute control, so what was the impediment in his way to fight militancy and terrorism?"
Leading lawyer and opposition figure Aitzaz Ahsan was one of the first to be detained on Saturday.
"They have served me a detention order for 30 days," Ahsan, president of the Supreme Court Bar Association, told reporters outside his home in the capital. Continued...
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