Sunday, October 22, 2017

Asif Ali Zardari - Nawaz Sharif and his brother tried to assassinate me twice





Pakistan's former President has claimed that ousted prime minister and his brother twice planned to assassinate him.


Zardari, 62, said that Nawaz and Shahbaz plotted his murder when he was serving his eight-year-long sentence in corruption cases. He said the Sharif brothers planned to kill him when he was going to a court to attend his hearing.


"The Sharif brothers - former prime minister and his younger brother Punjab Chief Minister - twice planned my murder in captivity in the 1990s," Zardari said while speaking to party workers at Bilawal House, Lahore, on Saturday.


Zardari further said Nawaz has been trying to make contact with him to seek his support. "I have refused," he added. 


"I have not yet forgotten what they (Sharifs) have done to Benazir Bhutto (his wife) and me. We forgave them and signed Charter of Democracy, but still Mian sahib (Nawaz) betrayed me and went to court in in order to label me a traitor," he said.


The controversy revolved around a memorandum seeking the help of the Obama administration in the wake of the Osama bin Laden raid to avert a military takeover of the civilian government in Pakistan.


The memo is alleged to have been drafted by Pakistan's then ambassador to the US Husain Haqqani at the behest of Zardari. Sharif demanded an enquiry into the matter and also threatened to resign from the National Assembly if the Zardari government did not satisfactorily probe the matter.

"The Sharif brothers cannot be trusted this time around and I will not shake hands with them," he added.

"They change colour so quickly. When they are in trouble they are ready to cooperate with you... when in absolute power they hit you smartly," Zardari said.

Zardari made it clear to party leaders to forget an alliance with the PML-N after the 2018 election.

"We will be on a strong footing after next year's poll," he added.

Zardari has been hitting out at the Sharifs since the disqualification of in the on July 28 by a Supreme Court Bench.

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