President will remain in hospital for checks: PM office

President will remain in hospital for checks: PM office
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Summary President Asif Ali Zardari will remain under medical observation after suffering a heart attack.

Pakistani President AsifAli Zardari will remain in a Dubai hospital for a heartcondition, the prime ministers office said on Wednesday.The 56-year-old head of state flew to the United Arab Emirates on Tuesday after falling ill in the midst of a major scandal over alleged attempts by a close aide to seek US help to limit the power of Pakistans military.His illness sparked media reports that he is contemplating resignation, but loyalists have ruled out any question that he may step down and the president has defied many critics in already holding onto power for three years.He had a minor heart attack on Tuesday. He flew to Dubai where he had an angioplasty. Hes in good health now, Mustafa Khokhar, adviser to the prime minister on human rights who sits in the cabinet, told AFP.Theres no question of any resignation, he added.Khokhar said Zardari would return to Islamabad on Thursday, but the prime ministers office later said that although the president was stable he would remain under observation as doctors examine the cause of his illness.The statement made no mention of heart attack, saying only that he went to Dubai following symptoms related to a pre-existing heart condition.Doctors have yet to determine whether he fell ill due to adverse reaction to medication or a development related to his pre-existing cardiac condition, it said after Zardaris son, Bilawal, met Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani.State media said Zardari left for Dubai on Tuesday, accompanied by his physicians and personal staff.Zardari took office after his Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) won general elections in February 2008, three months after his wife, former prime minister Benazir Bhutto was assassinated.Although he has survived numerous crises and calls for his resignation, he has come under growing pressure over a memo allegedly written by close aide Husain Haqqani asking for American assistance in curbing the powerful military.Haqqani was forced to resign as ambassador to Washington last month and Zardari said Sunday that he would soon address a joint session of parliament. It was not clear if the health scare would delay that plan.Presidential spokesman Farhatullah Babar told AFP that Zardari was in hospital for tests and a planned medical check up, but dismissed media reports that he may be forced to step down as speculative, imaginary and untrue.The website of the US magazine Foreign Policy reported that Zardari had been considering his resignation over health fears and the Memogate scandal.The article quoted an unnamed former US government official as saying Zardari was incoherent when he spoke to President Barack Obama by telephone over the weekend following NATO air strikes that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers.The row centres on a memo sent in May to the USs then Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen, seeking help over fears of a military coup following the US raid that killed Osama bin Laden.Mansoor Ijaz, a Pakistani-American businessman, accused Haqqani of crafting the memo with Zardaris support. Haqqani has denied involvement and investigators have yet to prove to what extent Zardari may have been involved.The night raid by US Navy SEALS in a Pakistani garrison town on May 2 provoked outrage in Islamabad and humiliated the military, which was not informed of the operation beforehand.Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari will remain in a Dubai hospital for a heart condition, the prime ministers office said on Wednesday.The president went to Dubai following symptoms related to his pre-existing heart condition, Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilanis media office said in a statement.The president will remain under observation and return to resume his normal functions as advised by the doctors.
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