The election by federal and provincial lawmakers was a one-sided affair. Just over half the eligible lawmakers turned out to vote, with nearly all the opposition parties abstaining or boycotting to protest Musharraf's bid for a new five-year term while still army chief.
In total, Musharraf won 671 votes, compared with just eight for his main rival
- retired judge Wajihuddin Ahmad. Six ballots were invalid, election officials said.
The Supreme Court ruled Friday that the official results can only be declared after it rules on complaints lodged by Musharraf's opponents that his candidacy is unconstitutional.
The complete unofficial results were announced just 80 minutes after the five hours of voting, broadcast on national television, was done
- and ruling-party lawmakers were claiming victory even before counting began. Only a handful of the government's opponents were among the 685 of the 1,170 eligible lawmakers to vote.
"Everything about the election was constitutional, legal, moral and legitimate," Sher Afgan Khan Niazi, the minister for parliamentary affairs, told The Associated Press.
But the opposition contended the ballot was invalid.
"We will not accept him as president. He flouted the constitution, and he is a person who has hardly any respect for the rule of law," said Sadique ul-Farooq, a leader of the party of exiled former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.
Hearings on the petitions challenging Musharraf's candidacy will resume on Oct. 17, meaning if Musharraf wins he would have to wait at least 11 days before knowing whether he could take office.
His current presidential term expires Nov. 15.
Musharraf has seen his popularity plummet since a failed bid to oust the country's top judge in March, and has promised to give up his powerful army post if he wins the election and restore civilian rule.
He says he wants to stay on to continue policies that have turned around Pakistan's economy despite its position on the front line of the American-led war on terrorism and rising Islamic militancy.
The Supreme Court may be reluctant to overturn Musharraf's victory in the ballot.