http://uncleyap-news.blogspot.com/2009/03/pkistanis-lawyers-peasant-won-their-cj.html
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Pkistanis Lawyers & Peasant Won their CJ back
When a judge is just and respected by the people and members of the bar, it will be shown so clearly to the entire world. The people will fight hard to bring their justice back on to the bench. The corrupted dictator can take the justice down, but the people will fight and restore justice. I am proud for the Pakistanis people and lawyers. Cheers to their victory and spirit. Singaporeans must learn from them.
Yahoo News URL
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Pkistanis Lawyers & Peasant Won their CJ back
When a judge is just and respected by the people and members of the bar, it will be shown so clearly to the entire world. The people will fight hard to bring their justice back on to the bench. The corrupted dictator can take the justice down, but the people will fight and restore justice. I am proud for the Pakistanis people and lawyers. Cheers to their victory and spirit. Singaporeans must learn from them.
Yahoo News URL
Pakistan to reinstate top judge, defusing crisis
<cite class="vcard"> By CHRIS BRUMMITT, Associated Press Writers Chris Brummitt, Associated Press Writers </cite> – <abbr title="2009-03-16T07:12:57-0700" class="timedate">Mon Mar 16, 10:12 am ET</abbr>
ISLAMABAD – Pakistan's government relented in a major confrontation with the opposition Monday, agreeing to reinstate a fired Supreme Court chief justice whose fate had sparked street fights and raised fears of political instability.
A dawn announcement by the prime minister that Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry would be sworn back in on March 21 capped a weekend of high drama and led activist lawyers and opposition politicians to drop plans to march on the capital and stage a sit-in at Parliament later in the day.
The U.S Embassy praised the decision as "statesmanlike," but it also was a significant concession that showed the weakness of U.S.-allied President Asif Ali Zardari, who had long refused to restore the independent-minded Chaudhry despite demands by lawyers and opposition leader Nawaz Sharif. Already, attempts to quell the protest movement — through arrests and bans on rallies — have exposed cracks in the ruling party.
Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani's announcement also promised the restoration of a handful of other judges who had remained off the bench since former President Pervez Musharraf sacked them in 2007. He further ordered the release of activists arrested over the past week and appealed for political reconciliation in Pakistan, a nuclear-armed nation that also faces an economic crisis.
Those arrests and other moves to block the protests — which led to clashes over the weekend — echoed Musharraf's responses to the lawyers' back in 2007.
Jubilant supporters waved flags and cheered outside Chaudhry's Islamabad home, and the grinning jurist briefly made an appearance on the balcony. Activists said the decision was a triumph for democracy, and the nation's stock market rallied in the morning.
<cite class="vcard"> By CHRIS BRUMMITT, Associated Press Writers Chris Brummitt, Associated Press Writers </cite> – <abbr title="2009-03-16T07:12:57-0700" class="timedate">Mon Mar 16, 10:12 am ET</abbr>
ISLAMABAD – Pakistan's government relented in a major confrontation with the opposition Monday, agreeing to reinstate a fired Supreme Court chief justice whose fate had sparked street fights and raised fears of political instability.
A dawn announcement by the prime minister that Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry would be sworn back in on March 21 capped a weekend of high drama and led activist lawyers and opposition politicians to drop plans to march on the capital and stage a sit-in at Parliament later in the day.
The U.S Embassy praised the decision as "statesmanlike," but it also was a significant concession that showed the weakness of U.S.-allied President Asif Ali Zardari, who had long refused to restore the independent-minded Chaudhry despite demands by lawyers and opposition leader Nawaz Sharif. Already, attempts to quell the protest movement — through arrests and bans on rallies — have exposed cracks in the ruling party.
Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani's announcement also promised the restoration of a handful of other judges who had remained off the bench since former President Pervez Musharraf sacked them in 2007. He further ordered the release of activists arrested over the past week and appealed for political reconciliation in Pakistan, a nuclear-armed nation that also faces an economic crisis.
Those arrests and other moves to block the protests — which led to clashes over the weekend — echoed Musharraf's responses to the lawyers' back in 2007.
Jubilant supporters waved flags and cheered outside Chaudhry's Islamabad home, and the grinning jurist briefly made an appearance on the balcony. Activists said the decision was a triumph for democracy, and the nation's stock market rallied in the morning.
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