Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani did not seek Britain's help to prevent a military take-over in Pakistan, authorities said.
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A spokesman of the Prime Minister house on Friday denied a news report which claimed that Gilani had telephoned the British high commissioner for his help to avert a coup.
Coup rumours have swirled in the country ever since a secret memo to Washington came to light last year that said President Asif Ali Zardari had feared an army take-over after Al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden was killed in Abbottabad, near Islamabad, May 2 last year.
Zardari's abrupt departure to Dubai in December last year as well as the lingering stand-off between the political leadership and the powerful army have fuelled rumours of a coup.
A statement from the Prime Minister's House mentioned a news report by a foreign news agency that Gilani spoke to British High Commissioner Adam Thomson last week seeking the British help to pre-empt the coup, reported Associated Press of Pakistan.
The spokesman said: "The Prime Minister has not spoken to the British high commissioner in this regard and the story is totally unfounded."
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