Thousands cheer sacked Pak judge
Afp, Faisalabad
Thousands of Pakistanis braved the rain here yesterday to cheer the country's top judge, keeping the pressure on President Pervez Musharraf to end a crisis over the chief justice's ouster. About 5,000 lawyers and opposition party activists camped out through the night to greet Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry as he arrived in the eastern city of Faisalabad, completing a two-day journey from the capital Islamabad. The trip is the latest in a series of processions undertaken by the judge since Musharraf suspended him on March 9 on misconduct charges, sparking the biggest crisis of the military ruler's eight years in power. "The struggle will continue until we have an independent judiciary," Chaudhry's supporters shouted as his motorcade arrived early Sunday in Faisalabad, to the tune of beating drums and booming firecrackers. In a speech to the cheering crowd, Chaudhry avoided direct criticism of Musharraf, but made another impassioned plea for judicial independence and urged his supporters to keep up their campaign. "The organs of the state cannot function properly unless there is separation of powers as enshrined in the constitution," he said. "You have struggled for the supremacy of the constitution and the rule of law for the past three months and you should remain united and shun your petty differences for this greater cause." "A society can only be successful when there is supremacy of the constitution," Chaudhry said, citing several cases in which he had helped the country's poor to get justice through the courts. Nearly 60,000 Pakistanis turned out to support Chaudhry during his 290-kilometre (180-mile) trek from Islamabad to this central industrial city, waving flags and showering him with rose petals during the 22-hour voyage. Tens of thousands greeted the chief justice along the way when he travelled to the northwestern city of Abbotabad and Lahore in the past two months. But more than 40 people were killed after clashes between rival political factions broke out when Chaudhry tried and failed to address a meeting in the southern port city of Karachi in May. In a crackdown ahead of Chaudhry's Faisalabad trip, police arrested about 300 opposition party activists. The Pakistan People's Party of former premier Benazir Bhutto said one of its workers had died in custody.
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