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Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan's president, will resign from his position, following months of pressure from the country's civilian government.

August 18, 2008 by editor  (View Source

(ajz) Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan's president, has said he will resign from his position, following months of pressure from the country's civilian government. The move, which came in a televised address to the nation on Monday, is intended to help him avoid impeachment charges drawn up by the ruling coalition. "After consultations with my legal advisers and close political friends, for the country and the nation today, I am deciding to resign from my office," Musharraf said. "I am leaving with the satisfaction that whatever I did for this country and the population, I did with honesty and commitment. "But I am also a human being," he said. "I might have made some mistakes, but I have hope that this nation and the population will tolerate those mistakes with the belief that my intentions were always clear and to the benefit of this country." There have been persistent rumours that Musharraf was going to resign to avoid charges of impeachment that were to be levelled against him in parliament later this week. Pakistani officials say that Musharraf's aides have held talks with the ruling coalition, brokered by Saudi Arabia, the US and the UK, to allow him to quit in return for an indemnity for his previous actions. Kamal Hyder, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Islamabad, said that a tremendous amount of speculation about Musharraf's resignation had built-up before the announcement, following the threat of impeachment by Pakistan's ruling coalition.


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