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Islamabad: Eighty-three per cent of Pakistanis want President Pervez Musharraf to be removed and judges he sacked restored, according to a survey by US-based International Republican Institute (IRI) released on Thursday.
Coming three-and-a-half months after a coalition made up of anti-Musharraf parties formed a government, the IRI survey said Nawaz Sharif, the prime minister Musharraf overthrew in 1999, was now the most popular leader, because of the uncompromising position he has taken over the issues.
In contrast, the Pakistan People's Party of slain former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, which heads the ruling coalition, has been hurt by its ambivalence over the reinstatement of judges and how to tackle Musharraf.
Yet 52 per cent of respondents said they were optimistic that things would get better in Pakistan under the new government.
The uncertainty in nuclear-armed Pakistan is worrying Western powers and neighbours in the region, who fear a transition to civilian-led democracy could founder at a time when the threat of Islamist militancy is growing and the economy is floundering.
The survey from the IRI, a US government-funded organisation chaired by Republican US presidential contender John McCain, said Musharraf's job approval ratings had dropped to 11 per cent.
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