ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) - President Gen.
Pervez Musharraf held secret talks with opposition leader and
former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, a government minister
said. Media widely reported that the once-bitter rivals
discussed a power-sharing deal.
Such an alliance could strengthen the
increasingly embattled Musharraf by bringing the secular,
liberal opposition into his government amid growing concern
about a rise in Islamic militancy. Analysts said Saturday that
Pakistan's Western allies would welcome that.
But newspaper and television reports said the
talks stalled over Bhutto's insistence that Musharraf, a key
U.S. ally in fighting terrorism, must quit his military post if
he hopes to remain president.
Minister for Railways Sheikh Rashid Ahmed told
The Associated Press that the president and Bhutto "held a
successful meeting" in the Gulf emirate of Abu Dhabi on Friday.
He would not elaborate on the subject of the talks.
Bhutto, leader of the secular Pakistan People's
Party, the country's largest opposition group, told Pakistani
television station KTN by phone from London that: "Whatever we
have done and are doing it is for democracy and social and
economic rights of the people of Pakistan."
But she repeatedly dodged the question when
asked if she had met with Musharraf.
"Let's talk of something else," she said.
Musharraf seized power in a bloodless coup in
1999 and pledged to quickly restore democracy. He is expected to
seek re-election when his term expires in October, and he wants
the current crop of politicians in federal and provincial
assemblies - who supported him five years ago - to vote again.