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| Asif Ali Zardari is not menttaly Fit ?? NoToRi0uS 51|?|= 74|\||-|41 ![]() Join Date: May 2006 Location: §= - گمشدہ - =§
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Blog Entries: 138 Rating: (0 votes - average) A report in Financial Times: Battle scars on show as spotlight returns to Zardari By Farhan Bokhari in Islamabad, Michael Peel in London,,and Daniel Dombey in Washington Published: August 26 2008 03:00 | Last updated: August 26 2008 03:00 Twenty years after Asif Ali Zardari shot to political fame when his late wife, Benazir Bhutto, became the first female Muslim prime minister of an Islamic country, the leading candidate to be Pakistan's next president is again battling his past. The 54-year-old former businessman has spent more than half his 20-year political career in prison in Pakistan fighting corruption charges and most of his recent past in exile fighting off similar allegations in international courts. In the wake of his wife's assassination last December and the decision by former general Pervez Musharraf to step down as president last week there has never been a more pressing moment to present his side of the story. But the questions facing Mr Zardari are not only over his well-documented fight against various corruption charges but over the scars that those battles left behind. The scars are documented in a bundle of medical reports dated between June 2005 and September last year on file in Britain's High Court, where Mr Zardari claimed ill health to try to fight off court proceedings brought by Pakistan's former government. The court case ended last year, along with others brought against Mr Zardari internationally and in Pakistan, after a deal struck between Bhutto and Mr Musharraf that led to her return from exile. A prosecutor in Switzerland yesterday brought a formal close to corruption charges brought against Mr Zardari there. The sheaf of documents - from specialists ranging from a Dubai cardiologist to a New York psychiatrist - remains, however, and paints a picture of a man with multiple and severe physical and mental health problems. In March last year, Stephen Reich, a New York state-based psychologist, diagnosed Mr Zardari with dementia, major depressive disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder, problems stemming in part from being tortured while imprisoned in Pakistan. Mr Zardari could remember neither the birthdays of his wife and children, nor more than a handful of facts from two short stories he was read. "He had difficulty focusing, concentrating and paying attention, is persistently sad, chronically anxious and apprehensive. He stated that he has had suicidal thoughts, but has not made any suicide gestures," Mr Reich wrote. Another March 2007 diagnosis - by Philip Saltiel, a New York City-based psychiatrist - said emotional and neurological problems suffered by Mr Zardari because of medical treatment and imprisonment had resulted in "emotional instability" and "deficits in memory and concentration". Mr Saltiel wrote: "I do not foresee any improvement in these issues for at least a year." Mr Reich re-examined Mr Zardari in June and September last year, each time reporting that he had made progress but still had problems that might make it impossible for him to testify in court. Months after Mr Reich's September diagnosis, Mr Zardari became a key political player in Pakistan after the Pakistan People's party won the most seats in parliamentary elections. Mr Zardari could not be reached to comment. But his supporters argue that he has overcome his medical problems and is ready to lead Pakistan. "His doctors have declared him medically fit to run for political office and free of any symptoms," said Wajid Shamsul Hasan, Pakistan's high commissioner to London and a long-standing political ally and friend of the Zardari/Bhutto family. US officials say they can work with Mr Zardari despite the controversies of his past. Indeed, some US diplomats are more concerned about Nawaz Sharif, leader of the junior coalition party PML-N, whose tenure as prime minister in the 1990s they remember as difficult for US-Pakistan relations. Over the past year Washington has made a particular effort to cultivate relations with the PPP. Mr Zardari's supporters also argue that all of the corruption allegations he has faced have been tainted by politics. "People have to recognise that there isn't even a single case [of corruption] which was conclusively proven against Mr Zardari. The matter has been politicised over the years, people have made wild accusations," said Nayyar Bukhari, a senior leader of the PPP, previously run by Bhutto, of which Mr Zardari is now the co-chairman. PPP leaders also claim Pakistanis have bigger problems than Mr Zardari's past to worry about, such as the growing Taliban-led insurgency and the worsening economy. Western diplomats in Islamabad say that is true, up to a point. Should Mr Zardari be elected president he will have to demonstrate quickly that he is taking charge of the fight against Islamists, they say. Otherwise his past is likely to resurface as an issue. "If in the coming weeks or months, there are signs of the Islamic insurgency beginning to be defeated, it is possible that [Mr] Zardari will get credit for that," said one. "The main challenge however is that there are no easy solutions or short-cuts in sight to deal with [militants]. Does this then expose him to criticism on his past? That's the key question." Additional reporting by Daniel Dombey in Washington [Only registered and activated users can see links. ] | |
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| Re: Asif Ali Zardari is not menttaly Fit ?? Hahahaa Well done man… you gave “hum Imran Khan” to talk other than President Zaradari’s corruption. And Now ... Mr. 0% (offcourse Nawaz Sharaif) and company can impeach President Zaradari. |
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| Re: Asif Ali Zardari is not menttaly Fit ?? yeah seems interesting a person mentally not fit going to have few crucial Powers in shape of President of pakistan |
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| Re: Asif Ali Zardari is not menttaly Fit ?? hahaha Amir man your so quick. I just read that news somewhere in london. Reallly it's not just Asid who is mentally sick, i would suggest al of his supporter to go and consult with their doctors. |
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| Re: Asif Ali Zardari is not menttaly Fit ?? i beleive that med check up of PPP non elected advisor be also demanded y nation |
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| Re: Asif Ali Zardari is not menttaly Fit ?? |
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| Asif ali zardari is not menttaly fit? do you think ? musharaf was menttaly fit? do you think maulana fazal is menattly fit? do you think qazi is menttaly fit? and above all do you think we as a nation are menttaly fit? because we are keep electing same peoples again and again . i think we deserve that asif zardari if he is bagil or not rule and head the pakistan because we will get what we elect so every one have to accept now. and we will have to bare this pain untill we get another chance to elect them again and at that time if we come out of our pagil pan then we will elect right peoples to run pakistan otherwise we will bare this pain again for next 5 years. also qazi's statement regarding nawaz shareef, i personally think that qazi should not have issued this statement, because he is not saint too just reminding peoples here that he was the one of those peoples who helped musharaf to pass his 17th ammendment. so |
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| Re: Asif Ali Zardari is not menttaly Fit ?? for your logic there is only one person (off course with his party) is not Bagil in all pakistan ... and that is Mr 0 %... Nawaz naSharif ? what a logic....... paa jee |
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