India-Pakistan | ||||||
Militants, extremists created deliberately: Zardari | ||||||
2009-09-19 | ||||||
[Geo News] President Asif Ali Zardari has said that the extremists and militants were created decades ago by a deliberate policy to employ religious fanaticism for the achievement of certain strategic objectives.
Militants and militancy were not created in a vacuum, the President said adding, they have been the product of a deliberate policy to fight the rival ideology.
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India-Pakistan |
Mumtaz Bhutto can't lodge FIR in BB's killing, says Sanam |
2009-04-16 |
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India-Pakistan |
The only people I care for in Pakistan are dead, says Sanam Bhutto |
2009-03-20 |
Daphne Barak " I don't care about HIM, about anybody in Pakistan. There is no one person I would call right now...Everybody I care about is dead." These were the words of an extremely bitter Sanam Bhutto on Sunday afternoon. I was shocked so I repeated once again how bad the political situation under controversial president Asif Ali Zardari is. I briefly told her the trouble is escalating by the minute and may turn into bloodshed. This didn't change the uncaring manner of Sanam Bhutto. She simply reiterated that the only people she would care to help are dead. Sanam is the assassinated former prime minister Benazir Bhutto's sister. Her father Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, two brothers and eldest sister Benazir have all been killed. She lives in London with her children, after an abusive marriage; according to her ("I married him because I wanted to escape life in Pakistan. It has become a nightmare: life with him, separation from him"). Benazir had introduced me to her younger sister Sanam in New York. We reconnected after Benazir was murdered. I told Asif, who was running the election campaign in her place that I wanted to see Sanam. Although Sanam told me later on, that "I don't have any relationship with HIM. I don't even have his private phone..." - Sanam's emotional first ever TV interview with me, mourning Benazir and the rest of her legendary family, revived the emotion right after Benazir's assassination on December 27, 2007. I chose to air it and print it worldwide just because Pakistanís elections which were postponed by the then president Pervez Musharraf because of Benazir's assassination. Asif who has been one of the most reviled politicians in Pakistan, nicknamed "Mr. 10 per cent" and was relying on the support of his assassinated wifeís memory. He was scared that this emotional support would be less overwhelming in the postponed elections that Musharraf had smartly initiated. My worldwide interview with Sanam was part of my "spin" to correct that and help my friend's widower who told me he believed in democracy and the freedom of the press and wished to be elected and continue what Benazir had hoped to achieve by returning to Pakistan. Musharraf acknowledged the importance of Sanam Bhutto's interview as a major factor in Asif's victory in the elections of February 2008, when we met recently in London. Many others did too. However, Sanam Bhutto has not been treated like a political asset to say the least. She told me that she was struggling financially and, "my brother-in-law is doing nothing to help me.î She added that ì Benazir helped me with my children's education." In fact, when she went for a beauty treatment, she used to go with Benazir, she was so nervous when they asked for her credit card. When I took the trembling Sanam to dinner afterwards, she told me: "Daphne, I was so nervous when they asked for my credit card. I thought it will not go through. I was scared, I would have to ask you to loan me money immediately..." Sanam made an appearance at Benazir's birthday in Pakistan, and the swearing-in ceremony of Asif Ali Zardari as president. She had showed up with Bilawal and Benazir's two daughters. But behind all that she was forced to remain distant from Benazir's kids. She had been a very involved aunt, almost a mother figure up until then. I have witnessed her close relationship with Bilawal after Benazir's death. That is why I almost hit the roof when Bilawal emailed me in April 2008 saying that, "I hardly see Sanam any more..." Sanam who rarely talks about politics lost it after an emotional dinner with Bilawal, myself and my producer Erbil. On our way back from dinner, Sanam's anger came out: "I will never forgive HIM. Why is he taking over the party? Let democracy happen. Let the people in the PPP decide who will be the leader. He always criticised my sister that she did not have the right people around her, that she does not know... that he knows better... She was working so hard. He always criticised her... She wanted so much to spend time with him. He always preferred to spend time with his friends. And she tried so much to please him... So now, let us see what he can do. Whether he can do any better..." I chose not to use angry words which were repeated more than on one occasion. I wasn't sure if Sanam wanted her real opinion and pain to surface. But her blunt statement, earlier today, spoke volumes. |
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India-Pakistan |
'Identifying murderers will not bring BB back' |
2008-01-27 |
Former premier Benazir Bhuttos younger sister Sanam Bhutto has said she is not interested in knowing the identity of her sisters murderers as that will not bring her sister back. In an interview with TV channel Geo News, Sanam said that the issue to catch Benazirs killers had become irrelevant for her, but it would be in everyones interest if the UN or another independent body investigated the murder. I dont care who killed my sister because that will not bring my sister back. Not Musharraf: She said she would trust Scotland Yard investigations, but not under the supervision of Musharraf. She regretted she could not help her sister, adding that Benazir had always been her own boss, had had some extraordinary achievements, and always kept her word. She said Benazir always kept the family united but after her nothing would remain the same. Sanam said that she had been shopping in London she was informed that Benazirs rally had been bombed. Sanam hoped the circumstances will change in Pakistan when her nephew Bilawal Bhutto Zardari takes charge of the PPP. She said she wanted Bilawal to complete his studies before entering politics, adding that her father and sister had sacrificed a lot for Pakistan and those sacrifices would never be forgotten. |
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India-Pakistan | ||
Absurdistan? | ||
2008-01-04 | ||
By Arnaud de Borchgrave![]() These friends of longstanding had never heard of such a document. Zardari is known as "Mr. 10 percent" and is widely reviled as one of the most corrupt political hacks of the past 30 years. As "minister of investment" in Bhutto's second cabinet, all government contracts passed through his hands. They were not approved until a kickback was deposited in a numbered foreign bank account. There are cases pending against him in three foreign jurisdictions, including Switzerland, for money-laundering.
Trials have been held in several Pakistani jurisdictions without any sentence being pronounced, but he has been imprisoned twice, the last time for 8 œ years, in a forbidding fortress prison near Peshawar. Released in 2004 because of poor health, which included a heart ailment, he has lived in New York for the past two years while undergoing treatment. None of about 18 corruption and criminal cases against Zardari was proved in court over 10 years. Bhutto herself faced corruption charges in half a dozen cases, which she steadfastly denied and said were politically motivated. It was Zardari's increasingly lucrative deals that prompted President Farooq Leghari to dismiss Bhutto and her government in 1996. Leghari was shown invoices for the purchase of French military aircraft padded several million dollars per plane beyond the agreed price. Leghari is one of the very few clean political leaders in the country and is now being touted as "Mr. Clean" to lead a coalition government after the next elections, now postponed until Feb. 18. Bhutto told those closest to her she would never allow Zardari back into Pakistan's political process if she herself were to make it back for a third term as prime minister. He was damaged goods beyond political repair. In fact, he was now a political liability for the Pakistan People's Party. The last thing on Bhutto's mind was to promote the political rehabilitation of her husband in an arranged marriage who had brought down her government, not once but twice. If something were to happen to her, she mentioned her 19-year-old son Bilawal, but felt he would not be ready for the rough and tumble world of Pakistan's dysfunctional politics until he finished his history degree at Oxford. Her e-mail messages to close friends in the United States and the United Kingdom mentioned the names of would-be assassins, but not who should succeed her in case of death. PPP leaders accepted the husband's surprise proclamation of the hitherto unknown heir for the sake of party unity and to ensure victory in the forthcoming elections. These leaders are now conceding, albeit off the record, Zardari hijacked the party on television when he read her alleged will. That Bilawal Bhutto would accept his elevation to succeed his mother and then transfer the mantle in the next sentence to his father stretches credulity among those who knew Bhutto best. When arrested the first time in 1990, after Bhutto was first dismissed as prime minister, Zardari was accused of tying a remote-controlled bomb to the leg of a U.K.-based Pakistani businessman, Murtaza Bukhari, and sending him into a bank to withdraw money from his account for a payoff he had been avoiding. In 1993, when Bhutto regained power, Zardari was plucked out of prison to be made the minister in charge of government investments (i.e., contracts). No sooner was Bhutto deposed the second time than Zardari was charged with the murder of Mir Murtaza Bhutto, his wife's influential brother, who was expected to play the role of PPP leader. After the execution of their father Zulfikar Ali Bhutto by military dictator President Zia ul-Haq in 1979, Murtaza Bhutto fled to communist-controlled Afghanistan. From there and later in Middle Eastern capitals, Murtaza Bhutto mounted an insurgency against Pakistan's military regime, then won elections from exile in 1993, became a provincial legislator, came home -- only to be shot dead. Benazir's other brother, Shahnawaz, was also politically active -- and was found dead of poisoning in his French Riviera apartment in 1985. Zardari was the son of a Sindhi tribal chief who had opted for the lifestyle of the wealthy upperclassmen. Asif did most of his schooling at Karachi's St. Patrick's, as did President Musharraf. A polo-playing bachelor, he had a private disco at home and was known as a playboy. Benazir, a product of the establishment, became the icon of the anti-establishment -- and Zardari feigned to conform. He grew very wealthy, protected by her long shadow. If the Bhutto dynasty holds, the legitimate heir of the PPP is Sanam Bhutto, Bhutto's younger sister and only daughter left among the children of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, the prime minister who was hanged by the previous military dictator. Sanam is convinced the assassination of Benazir's brother, Murtaza, was ordered by Zardari. Murtaza's widow and children are also certain Zardari was involved. How long can such an ailing 54-year-old maintain the fiction he is now Pakistan's most prominent political leader? Stay tuned. Arnaud de Borchgrave is editor at large with The Washington Times and with United Press International | ||
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India-Pakistan | ||
Bhutto tribe patriarch disputes party leadership succession | ||
2008-01-02 | ||
MIR BHUTTO, Pakistan The elevation of slain former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto's husband and teenaged son to replace her as leaders of Pakistan's largest opposition party is re-opening fissures that have divided the powerful political family for decades. To Mumtaz Bhutto, the septuagenarian patriarch of the 700,000-strong Bhutto tribe, Asif Ali Zardari and his son, Bilawal, are interlopers. The leadership of the Pakistan Peoples Party, he said in an interview Tuesday, should have gone to "a real Bhutto."
The Bhuttos are ethnic Sindhis. Zardari is from the Baluch ethnic group. His son carried Zardari as his last name until after his mother's assassination last week, when he added Bhutto as his middle name in what some experts saw Mumtaz Bhutto was a founding member of the party established by Benazir Bhutto's father, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, the country's first democratically elected prime minister, who was executed two years after being toppled in a 1977 military coup. "The party has come into existence on the name and the sweat and the blood of the Bhutto family," asserted Mumtaz, 74, who lives on a grand country estate in Mirpur Bhutto, the original family village in southern Sindh Province. "Therefore, the leadership should either have gone to Sanam or Murtaza's son or daughter." Sanam, Benazir's sister, has never taken any active role in politics. Murtaza, Benazir's brother, saw himself as Zulfiqar Ali's true political heir, but he was gunned down in Karachi by police in 1996, leaving a daughter, Fatima, 25, and Zulfiqar Ali junior, 18. After Benazir took over leadership of the party in 1984, she sacked Mumtaz in a Benazir retorted that Murtaza was killed by people who wanted to "frame" her for his murder. Sanam always sided with Benazir and it is believed that her relations with Murtaza's children remain tense, even after Benazir's death. "The Zardaris have made no sacrifices for the party, whereas the [Bhutto] family have made big sacrifices. The Zardaris have just profited from it," said Mumtaz.
As Bilawal, 19, will continue his studies at Britain's Oxford University, the announcement Sunday that father and son will co-chair the PPP means that Zardari who was jailed for seven years on corruption and murder charges that were never proved is actually running the PPP for now. "This will split the party very badly. He [Zardari] has no political background or acumen. I think this will lead to break-up. Total disintegration," predicted Mumtaz Bhutto. So far, the PPP has accepted the succession plan. Sanam Bhutto also endorsed it. She said in a statement, "I believe that the resolution of the issue of leadership in accordance with (Benazir's) will has not only saved the party from a crisis of leadership but will also strengthen it further." Fatima Bhutto, a graduate of Columbia University in New York, who was tipped as a future challenger for the party's leadership even when Benazir was alive, has so far made no claim to her grandfather's legacy. But in a local newspaper article, she admitted she never reconciled with Benazir. "I never agreed with her politics. I never did. I never agreed with those she kept around her, the political opportunists, hanger-ons, them. They repulse me. I never agreed with her version of events. Never. But in death, in death perhaps there is a moment to call for calm," she wrote. | ||
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India-Pakistan |
Decision on Peoples Party leadership tomorrow |
2007-12-30 |
Central executive committee of Pakistan Peoples Party will meet Sunday afternoon at 3:00 am here after Soyem of Benazir Bhutto to decide about the partys leadership after martyrdom of the former prime minister. Her will would be read out to the meeting of the PPP. Two options are under consideration for the leadership of the party; in the first option Benazir Bhuttos sister Sanam Bhutto will be named as party chairperson and Makhdoom Amin Fahim will be appointed acting president. In another option Sanam Bhutto will be named chairperson and Asif Ali Zardari acting president of the party. The chairperson will be elected with unanimous decision of the central executive committee of the party, sources added. |
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