Themacforums – Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan’s Former Ex-president, Dies Aged 79. General Pervez Musharraf, the former leader of Pakistan who overthrew the government in a coup in 1999, passed away at the age of 79.

According to a statement from the nation’s army, the former leader, who served as president from 2001 and 2008, passed away in Dubai following a protracted illness.

He was on the front lines of the conflict between militant Islamists and the West after surviving many murder attempts.

After 9/11, he backed the US “war on terror” despite domestic resistance.

He lost the election in 2008, and six months later he departed the country.

He tried to run for office again in 2013 but was detained and prevented from doing so. He was charged with high treason and given a death sentence in absentia, but less than a month later, the ruling was overturned.

In order to receive medical attention, he traveled from Pakistan to Dubai in 2016 and has since been living in exile there.

On Sunday morning, Musharraf passed away in a hospital. His family requested that his remains be returned to Pakistan via a special flight from the United Arab Emirates, according to local TV station Geo News.

Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan's Former Ex-president, Dies Aged 79

The military of Pakistan issued a statement in which it offered its “sincere condolences” and prayed that Allah would “bless the soul of the deceased and give courage to the bereaved family.”

Arif Alvi, the president of Pakistan, prayed “for the departed soul’s ultimate rest and courage to the bereaved family to endure this loss.”

Shahbaz Sharif, the prime minister of Pakistan, and the military chiefs of the nation also sent their condolences.

Controversial Professional History

Extremes characterized Musharraf’s rule. Some people gave him credit for reversing the nation’s economic fortunes while he was in power.

After losing power, he became involved in a variety of legal disputes, including charges that he did not give former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto enough security after her killing by the Taliban in 2007 horrified Pakistan and the entire world.

And when he was ultimately found guilty of treason in 2019 and given a death sentence in absentia, his career came to an end in shame and arrest. Despite the fact that the sentence was eventually overturned, he never went back to Pakistan.

Despite these incidents, Musharraf’s former aide and current top leader in the party of the late Prime Minister Imran Khan, Fawad Chaudhury, praised Musharraf and the impact he made on Pakistan.

“Although he is referred to be a military dictator, there has never been a more robust democratic system than there is now. Pakistanis believe that the period of Pervez Musharraf’s rule was one of the best in the country’s history despite the fact that he oversaw it through a very trying time “Reuters reported Mr. Chaudhury’s remarks.

Controversial Professional History

Mosharraf Zaidi, the CEO of the research tank Tabadlab in Islamabad, asserted that Musharraf was accountable for the “destruction of Pakistan” during his administration.

In India, opinions were divided during his term in office.

Many Indians viewed Musharraf as an enemy because of his participation in the Kargil battle in May 1999 while serving as the army chief of his nation, when Pakistani generals secretly ordered an operation to capture heights in Kargil on the Indian side.

However, in the opinion of one MP from India, Musharraf turned things around while in office. Former UN ambassador Shashi Tharoor observed, “Once an implacable enemy of India, he became a tremendous champion for peace 2002-2007.”

In those years, Mr. Tharoor claimed to have seen Musharraf every year at the UN, praising him for being “clever, engaging, and clear in his strategic thinking.”

“Mixed Legacy”

According to a team of Themacforums, the general has a “mixed legacy.”

He said: “There are those who will tell you he done tremendous things for this country.” He was the one who made it possible for a number of private channels to go on the air and engage in controversial discussions, ushering in a revolution in Pakistan’s electronic media.

The team claimed that the media’s opening up “also proved to be his downfall.” That was the genie he accidentally let out of the bottle but was unable to catch.

According to Mosharraf Zaidi, the founder of the policy thinks tank Tabadlab in Islamabad, the legacy of the former military dictator will be the “awful consequences” of his time in office.

“Terrorism that results from the way the “war on terror” was waged in this country continues to cause problems for this nation. For the US, Musharraf “became a darling,” he claimed.

Mixed Legacy

He and George W. Bush were great friends. However, the Pakistani military and succeeding civilian governments have had to bear the consequences of his policies. Numerous Pakistani police officers and troops have died. Particularly the people of Pakistan have been left with the consequences of Musharraf’s totally unaccountable decisions.

The political party founded by Musharraf in 2010 did not gain any notable seats in the two general elections that followed. After being accused of treason in 2014, he made the decision to live in self-imposed exile in the United Arab Emirates.

He was given a death sentence in absentia in 2019 for the imposition of the emergency rule in 2007, but the decision was later overturned.

Sehba, Musharraf’s wife, and their two children are still living.