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THE STANS
Cricket star Khan set for May elections
by Staff Writers
Islamabad, Pakistan (UPI) Apr 8, 2013


Former international cricket star Imran Khan will contest a parliamentary seat in this year's Pakistani national elections.

The returning officer cleared the nomination papers of Khan, paving the way for the leader of the Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaf party to run in the May 11 elections.

The result of the polls will be similar to the outcome of the 1992 Cricket World Cup, Khan told reporters at Karachi Airport, a report by Dawn newspaper said. Khan, 60, played international cricket for 20 years and led Pakistan to the World Cup in 1992.

Khan, who also said the army will be needed at polling stations to ensure security, has been highly critical of the United States' use of drones over Pakistani territory in the war on terror.

He slammed the United States over its military drone strike in Waziristan in January that claimed more than a dozen lives, Dawn reported at the time.

Khan said that U.S. drone attacks are a violation of international law and also violate Pakistan's sovereignty tuning the country into a banana republic.

The acceptance of Khan as a candidate comes as former military dictator and returned exile Pervez Musharraf was barred from running as a candidate. Musharraf entered Pakistan March 24 after four years self-imposed exile in London and Dubai.

The former general is already on bail regarding existing legal cases with a further trial -- one for treason -- also a possibility.

Pakistan's Supreme Court accepted an application to charge Musharraf with treason, .

The application to the court was filed by Chaudhry Taufiq Asif, president of the Lahore High Court's Rawalpindi bench bar association, the Daily News reported.

"I have been informed by the Supreme Court that a three-member bench ... is going to hear my petition against Gen. Pervez Musharraf after three days," Asif said.

A treason trial would add trials Musharraf already is facing the possibility of several other trials and problems.

Musharraf, as head of his All Pakistan Muslim League Party, is challenging the returning officer's decision to disallow him from running in the election.

Only days after his return to Pakistan, the Sindh High Court extended Musharraf's bail for three weeks in consideration of pending cases against him.

Musharraf, 69, is facing three charges, including failing to provide sufficient security to stop the assassination of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto in December 2007 while she was campaigning against him.

He also is wanted in connection with the death of Baluchistan tribal leader Nawab Akbar Bugti, 79, in August 2006. Bugti, a former Baluchistan province minister turned nationalist rebel, was killed when a shell exploded in his mountain cave headquarters.

The Bugti case surrounds the circumstance in which the government raid on his cave took place and how the shell exploded.

Musharraf denies all charges of direct involvement in the Bugti death.

Another candidate in the May 11 elections is former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, 63 -- the man Musharraf toppled in a bloodless military coup in October 1999.

Sharif leads the breakaway Pakistan Muslim League -- Nawaz.

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THE STANS
Call for Britain to help military's Afghan interpreters
London (AFP) April 06, 2013
British military, political and academic figures on Saturday called on the government not to "abandon" the Afghan interpreters for the troops when they pull out of the country. In a letter to The Times newspaper, they said there were roughly 600 interpreters helping British forces, largely in the troubled southern Helmand province, with many now fearing Taliban reprisals as British troops st ... read more


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