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Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari would be discharged from a Dubai hospital on Thursday, his spokesman said Wednesday, December 14, 2011 Image Credit: Supplied

Lahore: A Pakistani court asked President Asif Ali Zardari yesterday to explain how he could be a chairman of the country's ruling party and head of state at the same time, a lawyer said.

The legal challenge to Zardari over his two posts did not pose an immediate threat to the unpopular president but it was a reminder of the legal difficulties he faced, legal analysts said.

The Pakistan Lawyers Forum (PLF) filed a petition, or a challenge, questioning the right of the president to hold the two offices and in response, the High Court in the city of Lahore ordered Zardari's principal secretary to explain.

"Since the president could not appear because of security reasons, the court asked his principal secretary to appear in court on May 25," PLF president A.K. Dogar told reporters outside the court.

There is no constitutional bar on the president holding office in a political party but Dogar said the Supreme Court had in the past barred a president from holding a party post.

"Our Supreme Court judges decided in 1993 that the president should be non-partisan," Dogar said.

"He should not involve himself in political battles.

"He should shun politics but here he is a party head, which is illegal."

Zardari, the widower of assassinated former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, is co-chairman of her Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), which emerged the biggest party after a February 2008 general election and heads a ruling coalition.

Their son, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, who is a student in Britain, is the other party co-chairman.

The president, dogged by corruption accusations stemming from the 1990s when Benazir Bhutto served two terms as prime minister, has struggled to win the popularity his wife enjoyed.

His political enemies question his legitimacy to rule and some want to see old corruption cases against him revived, even though he enjoys presidential immunity.

Zardari handed over most of the president's powers to the prime minister last month, partly to mollify his critics.

He retains considerable political influence as head of the PPP .