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Asif Ali Zardari made no offer to resign: Spokesperson

Zardari made no offer to resign during a meeting of top leaders of the country's ruling coalition that was held after the Supreme Court warned it could take action against him.

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Pakistan's beleaguered President Asif Ali Zardari made no offer to resign during a meeting of top leaders of the country's ruling coalition that was held after the Supreme Court warned it could take action against him, the presidential spokesperson said today.

Reacting to reports in a section of the media that said Zardari had offered to resign during a meeting of the Pakistan People's Party and its allies late last night, presidential spokesman Farhatullah Babar said, "There is no truth in these reports."

"Neither in the allies' meeting on Tuesday night nor at any other stage has the President offered to resign and the reports suggesting otherwise are contrary to the facts and reality of the situation," Babar said in a brief statement.

Sources in the PPP dismissed reports in a section of the media that Zardari intended to travel again to Dubai in the near future.

They pointed out that these reports had originated from a news agency that had last year issued reports based on fake WikiLeaks cables that it claimed were about India.

The News daily had quoted its sources as saying that Zardari had told the PPP's allies during last night's meeting that he was prepared to resign and call an early general election if parties in the ruling coalition wanted him to take such a step.

he top leadership of the PPP and its coalition partners met last night after the Supreme Court warned that action could be taken against Zardari and Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani for failing to reopen high-profile graft cases.

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