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Pakistan’s Pervez Musharraf: Court orders ex-ruler’s arrest

Mr Musharraf has also been barred from running in all four seats he hoped to represent in polls

A Pakistani court has ordered the arrest of Pakistan’s ex-military ruler Pervez Musharraf over moves to impose house arrest on judges in March 2007.

Mr Musharraf has also been barred from running in all four seats he hoped to represent in polls

Mr Musharraf was present at the Islamabad High Court when the judges issued the order. He had been seeking to extend bail in the case.

Police present at the court did not arrest him when the order was made.

The former general immediately left the court and drove away escorted by his security detail.

The BBC’s M Ilyas Khan in Islamabad says that despite an unwritten judicial convention discouraging police arrests on court premises, suspects are normally handcuffed in court.

Mr Musharraf can file an appeal against this court order in Pakistan’s Supreme Court.

Political woes

He returned from years of self-imposed exile last month hoping to lead his All Pakistan Muslim League (APML) party into the general election next month.

But earlier this week his candidacy was rejected in Chitral, one of four seats he had applied to contest. He had already failed in an attempt to stand in three other seats. His legal team plan to appeal against that decision.

He is embroiled in a series of legal battles and has been attempting to stave off arrest ever since he returned, as well as an attempt to try him for treason. The Pakistani Taliban have also vowed to assassinate the former president, who seized power in a 1999 coup.

He is facing a number of charges related to his time in office with court proceedings over the killing of Benazir Bhutto in 2007 and a tribal leader from Balochistan.

He has described all the cases against him as “baseless” and politically motivated.

This is the first arrest warrant issued for the former ruler since his return to Pakistan. Mr Musharraf has already been barred by a court from leaving the country.

Many analysts believe that the authorities would not welcome his arrest at such a politically sensitive time.

Our correspondent points out that Pakistan’s powerful military, of which he was the head until 2007, has not intervened to prevent his political fall.

Read full article on BBC

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