Zardari elected Pakistani president
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan, Sept. 6 (UPI) -- Asif Ali Zardari, the
spouse of the late former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, Saturday
became Pakistan's new president, officials said.
Officials in Islamabad said Zardari cruised to victory in
voting among both houses of the country's national assembly, The New
York Times reported. He also won majorities in the four provincial
parliaments.
As he claimed victory, Zardari urged Pakistanis to put their
differences aside, The Telegraph reported.
"Let any bitterness that may have been generated by
campaigning be left behind us, and let us all now join hands for the
common cause and common good of the people beyond partisan
considerations," he said.
Zardari, 53, succeeds Pervez Musharraf, who was forced to
resign last month under the threat of impeachment. Zardari spent 11
years in jail on corruption charges that were not proven, and is
seen as strongly pro-Western and supportive of U.S. efforts to
battle militant Taliban extremists both in neighboring Afghanistan
as well as in Pakistan itself.
Pakistan information minister Sherry Rehman told the Times,
"This is a verdict of the people of Pakistan. Today, every Pakistani
can raise his head with pride."
Zardari was thrown into the spotlight after Bhutto's
assassination in December, becoming head of the Pakistan People's
Party.
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