London, Feb.18 (ANI): Close aides of Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf sought to soften and brainwash Jemima Khan, the divorced wife of Imran Khan, ahead of her 30-minute interview with the President.
According to Jemima, the interview took place at the Camp Office in Rawalpindi, which used to be the headquarters of the Northern Command under the British.
Describing the place, she writes in The Independent that the building had delicately carved, wooden, double-height ceilings, sweeping central staircase, marble floors and ornate carpets, and it was not hard to see why Musharraf chose it as his private office in Rawalpindi. His residence too was just up the driveway, she added.
She said that about a dozen straight-backed men in uniform - red waistcoats over starched cream kurtas greeted her, and that she was immediately informed that the President was not quite ready.
She said that she was taken to the staff office for a "tea break" with Musharraf's personal assistant, a dashing, grey-haired, light-eyed naval commander, and a jovial head of security, also a young army officer, who joked that the delay was just an excuse for them to do a little preparatory brainwashing.
A bright yellow cake, some intimidating-looking chicken vol-au-vents and chai (milky tea) were wheeled in.
She said that Major General Qureshi, Musharraf's Alastair Campbell, tuckeds in happily and regaled her for an hour with stories about Soviet-era Pakistani military triumphs and the magnanimity and general excellence of his boss.
"Any country in the world would like to have this person as their leader," he said proudly.
And then, she was ushered into Musharraf's presence for the interview.
Jemima Khan believes that President Pervez Musharraf is not afraid of confronting his opponents.
In an article for The Independent, said: "He's a man who is not afraid of confrontation. Much to the justifiable fury of every journalist in Islamabad, he granted me an exclusive half-hour interview despite or perhaps because of the fact that I have recently described him as one of the most repressive dictators Pakistan has ever known."
She also said that Major-General Rashid Qureshi, President Pervez Musharraf's PR man, told her over the phone that: "Since you were so kind as to greet us in London at Downing Street last month, the President would like to return the favour."
"Only in Pakistan could the government's head of spin be a retired major-general," Jemima writes.
She said that when she went for the interview, Imran had already told her that he thought it was a a terrible idea to interview Musharraf, as it would be misinterpreted in Pakistan.
"Besides, you'll be too soft on him," she quoted Imran as telling her.
During her interview, Jemima Khan, arrived at the conclusion that Musharraf sans his army regalia, looked diminished.
Recalling that she was escorted into Musharraf's presence after an hour-long wait in the ante-room of the Camp Office in Rawalpindi, Jemima said that the last time that she saw Musharraf in the flesh, he looked commanding in his full army regalia.
"I find his brown business suit and dainty penny loafers which have replaced the sturdy army boots almost unsettling. He seems to have lost both height and swagger. And his body language seems just a touch defensive. The immaculate hair also troubles me. Boot-polish black, artfully grey at the temples, it shows signs of some work," she recalled.
She recalls that the interview started off on an unfortunate note, in that she reminded Musharraf about her protest against him during his visit to 10, Downing Street on January 28.
She said that Musharraf expressed his disappointment, and she felt at that stage that she had been "called to his office for a sound ticking-off."
"I was disappointed. Very disappointed. I was disappointed because you ought to be knowing our environment ... what Pakistanis are like ... what is our society. Well, it's acceptable if a person has never visited Pakistan and doesn't know Pakistan to have ideal views [presumably, he means idealistic views]. But I thought you ought to be knowing what Pakistan is ... This is not an ideal society," she quoted Musharraf , as saying.
She recalled that she last met Musharraf three days before the last elections in 2002, and more than five and a half years later, she felt there was a sea change in his approach to issues.
She said that when she first heard of him, she was a "somewhat naive supporter".
"Selfishly, I was relieved when he succeeded came to power by military coup on 12 October 1999. Nawaz Sharif, the prime minister he deposed, had tried to have me jailed on trumped-up, politically motivated charges of smuggling - a non-bailable offence in Pakistan. I suspect it was to intimidate my ex-husband, who at that time was a noisy critic. I had scarpered to London before I could be arrested and was able to return with my two children to Pakistan six months later only after Musharraf seized power and the charges against me were duly dropped."
When he first came to power, Jemima says Musharraf's express aim was to clean up Pakistan politics.
"He despised the corrupt politicians as much as anyone. He immediately set up his own national accountability bureau and declared that his mission was to hold the corrupt accountable."
When she interviewed him this year, she said that she told him that she was disappointed to see the corrupt not only getting off scot-free, but also had heard that he (Musharraf) would be doing business with the very same politicians he wanted to get rid of.
She says that Musharraf disarmingly agreed with a lot of what she said, and informed her "that he had no other choice but to deal with the existing leaders of the main parties."
"Yes, I agree with you [that charges should not have been dropped]. But then Benazir has good contacts abroad in your country, who thought she was the future of the country," she quotes Musharraf , as saying.
When she pressed him further on the corruption issue, suggesting that the guilty should have been forced to pass through the proper judicial process, she quotes Musharraf as saying: "No," because they would have all joined and then I would have been out."
"At this point he looks a bit wild eyed. He quickly adds that, of course, being in power has never been his ultimate goal. How much easier it would be, he adds wistfully and a touch unconvincingly, if he'd just resigned to play golf," she quotes him as saying.
"Often he fails to see the irony in his own words, which can be unintentionally comic. Several times I have to suppress a smile. When confronted with the suggestion, for example, that he will have to work with a coalition government consisting of some the most infamous crooks in Pakistan, he responds with great sincerity, "I'm not running a martial law here. What can I do?"
He adds, "My role as a president is simply the checks and balances - the seatbelts ... a sort of father figure to the Prime Minister but I won't have to see him for weeks."
The image he paints of himself as a benign, legitimised dictator is at odds with the recent Human Rights Watch report that accuses his regime of hundreds of enforced disappearances, arbitrary detentions, harassment, intimidation and extra-judicial killings, Jemima says.
Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf feels painfully let down and misunderstood. This feeling was particularly noticeable when he talked about her ex-husband, Imran.
"You know, I liked him. But he is the most unrealistic person. I wanted to support him." He mentions him a few times in the interview. And the strange thing is, I detect hurt. President Musharraf, dictator, despot, guardian of the West against al-Qaida - and all I can see are the wounded eyes of a betrayed lover when he talks about my ex," she says of Musharraf.
She recalls that under his regime, in the past year, Imran has been held under house arrest, jailed, then released and has had his movements restricted.
"Hell hath no fury like a general scorned," she concludes.
The PML-Q, the party otherwise known as the King's Party, assembled by President Musharraf himself six years ago to legitimise his "managed" democracy, allied with the Muttahida Qaumi Movement, will "certainly have the majority, Musharraf told Jemima Khan during an interview in Rawalpindi.
Whe she suggested that the recent opinion polls pointed otherwise, Musharraf dismissed the polls as biased, and conducted by local organisations that were against him.
"They have been abusing me right from the beginning and you will never get good results from them," he told her while she interviewed him on behalf of The Independent.
"He seems increasingly paranoid," she opines.
"The media have let me down ... The NGOs are against me. I don't know why. I think I have been the strongest proponent of human rights ...", he says.
He also says that the Western leaders have been "absolutely supportive" and "express total solidarity".