Musharraf trampled constitution -Pakistan court

ISLAMABAD, (Reuters) – Pakistan’s Supreme Court  ruled yesterday that former president Pervez Musharraf trampled  the constitution when he imposed emergency rule two years ago  and all actions taken by him then were illegal.

Musharraf, who came to power in a coup in 1999, quit as  president almost a year ago to avoid impeachment and has been  living in London for the past two months.

Yesterday’s judgment, delivered by a panel of 14 judges, did  not touch on whether Musharraf should be punished for his  misrule, but lawyers and politicians said it was a landmark  ruling that would deter future power grabs by Pakistani  generals.

Hoping to secure a second term as president before giving up  his dual role as army chief, Musharraf purged judges who stood  in his way, suspended the constitution and ordered the arrest of  hundreds of political opponents in November 2007.

Farhatullah Babar, a spokesman for President Asif Ali  Zardari, described the ruling as a “triumph of the democratic  principles, a stinging negation of dictatorship”.

Neither Musharraf nor his lawyers attended this week’s  hearings, despite being summoned by the court headed by his  nemesis, Chief Justice Chaudhry.
Lawyers clapped and shouted “Long live the chief justice”  and “Hang Musharraf” after Chaudhry read the judgment.

“It locks the door to future adventurism,” Aitzaz Ahsan, the  leader of the lawyers’ movement that challenged Musharraf’s  rule, told reporters.