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I'm open to working with Musharraf if polls are fair: Bhutto

Benazir Bhutto has said it is still possible for her to work with Pervez Musharraf in future if the January 8 Parliamentary polls are held in a free and fair manner.

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ISLAMABAD: In a turnaround from her earlier stand, former Pakistan Premier Benazir Bhutto has said it is still possible for her to work with President Pervez Musharraf in future if the January 8 Parliamentary polls are held in a free and fair manner.

The Pakistan People's Party (PPP) Chairperson, who had previously vowed not to work in any future dispensation under Musharraf, said she might still find it possible to cooperate with the President but this will depend on what happens in the general election.

"It's very difficult to say anything on this matter at this stage," she told 'Voice of America' in an interview.

"A lot will depend on the elections themselves and what the mood of the people is following the elections, because if the elections are rigged, it's going to put Musharraf on a confrontation course with the opposition parties," said Bhutto, who has repeatedly claimed that the ruling PML-Q will rig the polls.

She said Musharraf could still surprise people by conducting an honest election though she believed that is a 'remote possibility'.

"At the moment the situation is not conducive to fair elections within Pakistan," she said. "But certainly Musharraf has taken some steps that surprised many people, including me. And that included retiring as Chief of Army Staff. "

"So if he surprises us all by having a fair election, that will be very welcome. But the way things are going today, that would be a very big surprise."

Musharraf has completed preparations to lift the emergency he imposed on November 3.

Bhutto alleged that preparations for rigging were 'already well under way' including the falsification of electoral rolls with the inclusion of 'ghost voters' and intimidation of voters by local government officials.

The former Premier returned to Pakistan from self-exile in October following months of secret parleys with Musharraf on a power-sharing arrangement. She ended the talks after he imposed emergency.

Though other opposition parties tried to forge a united front to boycott the polls, Bhutto's party decided to contest.

"When my father was in prison under an earlier military dictatorship, he had still told the party to go ahead and fight so we could keep the party's political machinery well-oiled, and we could have an opportunity to meet the public, meet the voters and communicate our message to them," she said.

"So we thought it was better to have a political process than to leave the field open."

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