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Anti-Mush protests unite Imran Khan, Jemima

TimePublished on Mon, Jan 28, 2008 at 01:33, Updated on Mon, Jan 28, 2008 at 20:43 in Lifestyle section

TAKING ON MUSH: British socialite Jemima Goldsmith will join anti-Musharraf demonstrators outside 10, Downing Street.

TAKING ON MUSH: British socialite Jemima Goldsmith will join anti-Musharraf demonstrators outside 10, Downing Street.


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London: Jemima Khan will, for the first time, join her former husband Imran Khan at a demonstration against their common foe Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf.

The British socialite, who has been vociferously criticising Musharraf since he arrested Khan after imposition of Emergency in Pakistan, will be at 10, Downing Street chanting slogans when the Pakistani leader meets British Prime Minister Gordon Brown on Monday.

"I will be protesting against Gordon Brown's continued support for Pakistan's dictator. I will be joined by politicians, lawyers, doctors, human rights activists, journalists and ordinary Pakistanis," she told the Sunday Express on Sunday.

"We want to know why our Prime Minister is hosting a constitutionally illegal leader when many hundreds of political activists, lawyers and judges in Pakistan remain in prison or under house arrest and when the media there is still restricted," she said.

On the last day of his 4-day visit to the UK, Musharraf would meet Brown and later address a news conference.

Ever since he landed here on Friday, Musharraf has been facing a spate of demonstrations organised by human rights campaigners and opposition parties.

Imran Khan, who heads Pakistan’s Tehreek-e-Insaf party, specially flew in to London to participate in the demonstration.

Jemima, who had lived in Pakistan during her 9-year marriage to Imran, cast doubts on Musharraf's promise to hold fair and free elections.

However Musharraf says, “We will have elections on Feb 18 and I also informed the Prime Minister of the proceeding scenario. We are very sure that we will have a peaceful transition and will have a strong democratic government following the Feb 18 elections."

"Sixty per cent of the Supreme Court judges have been sacked by Musharraf and many are still under house arrest. There is no chance of free and fair elections under the supervision of hand-picked substitute judges, a pet caretaker government and a bogus election commission," she said.

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