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2013
23-10-2007, 02:08 AM
the falg of pakistan isa moon and a star , woman clothed in the moon and the stars? she was in exile in london before returning .Anyone else have any insight or info on her .I always thought she was an interesting figure when she was in power years back
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21417385/
Days after a suicide attack took the lives of at least 136 supporters, Benazir Bhutto told TODAY in an exclusive interview that she knew her return from exile would put her own life at risk along with the lives of the throngs of supporters who would be there to greet her.

Nonetheless, Benazir Bhutto told TODAY’s Ann Curry, the trip had to be made for the good of a country teetering on the edge.

“I knew people would be at risk,” Bhutto said during an interview taped Sunday in Karachi amid tight security. “The people who came knew that they would be at risk. They put their lives on the line. And I put my life on the line. And we did it because we want to save Pakistan. And we think saving Pakistan comes by saving democracy.”

Bhutto could have taken a helicopter from the airport to her home in Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city. Instead, she rode in an open truck in a motorcade. Hundreds of thousands of people packed the route, singing and dancing and chanting in celebration and turning a trip of less than half an hour into a 10-hour crawl.

Near midnight, the motorcade was attacked by a suicide bomber or bombers, killing at least 136 people and injuring hundreds more. Given the carnage, Curry asked, “Did you make the right choice to come back in this way?”

“I find this question very uncomfortable,” said Bhutto.



“Of course, you do,” Curry replied. “It’s a painful question.”

“The reason — let me tell you why,” Bhutto said. Had she taken a helicopter, she said, it “means that terrorists can dictate the agenda. It means that terrorists, by threatening violence, can take over nations and destroy the quality of life of their people.”

Long, bloody fight
Bhutto was the first female prime minister of Pakistan in 1988 and in 1996 served a second term. A member of a prominent political family, she was removed from office and imprisoned on charges of corruption.

Her father, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, had founded the Pakistan Peoples Party and served as prime minister, but was executed by the military in 1979 after a coup. She has also lost two of her brothers to political violence.

Her husband was tortured and she was held in solitary confinement before being allowed to go into exile in London in 1999.

She returned after lengthy negotiations with President Gen. Pervez Musharaff, with whom she has discussed forming a political alliance.

Her return is timed to allow her to campaign for the Peoples Party in parliamentary elections to be held in January. Musharaff granted her immunity from prosecution on the corruption charges to allow her to return.

“You're a mother of three. You could be living in London fine,” Curry told Bhutto. “You don't have to do this.”

“Look into the eyes of the people who came to receive me at the airport, the joy, the happiness, the singing, the dancing, before the terrorists struck,” said Bhutto. “They were celebrating my return because they want hope. If I don't come back, the 160 million people of Pakistan won't have hope of a future free from terrorism, a future that there will be democracy.”

Pakistan is under enormous pressure from the United States and the West, which looks to the country to stand firm against the Taliban and al-Qaida, who have taken refuge in the mountains of Pakistan after being expelled from neighboring Afghanistan. But Musharaff is also under pressure from Islamists who oppose cooperating with the United States.

Bhutto said that she was warned before she returned to Pakistan that an attempt would be made on her life. Curry asked about a letter Bhutto sent to Musharaff, a letter saying that three high-ranking government officials were involved in the plot.

“I'm simply saying that there are individuals who could have abused their individual position to do this. And the threat is still there,” Bhutto said.

“The militants want an Islamist takeover of Pakistan,” she said. “They have to be stopped. I have a choice to keep silent and to allow the extremists to do what they're doing, or have a choice to stand up and say, ‘This is wrong. And I'm going to try to save my country.’ And I have taken the second choice.”

That choice means visiting women who have lost their husbands and her wounded supporters and witnessing the price they have paid in blood for their beliefs and for her.

“You know, it's very hard to look into the face of somebody who has lost — lost a loved one,” Bhutto told Curry. “I told them I wished that there were words that I could say to lessen their grief. But I know there are no words.”

blue
23-10-2007, 06:25 AM
it looks like all planned. she knew that there would be attacks and she took the chance and didn't care about the lives which were at stake. these people in pakistan have no value for human life. they just kill people to achieve what they want. bhutto got her own support from people, specially from those who have lost their loved ones and family members, since she also lost her family in violence. just another political game

kamran1261980
24-10-2007, 06:22 PM
it looks like all planned. she knew that there would be attacks and she took the chance and didn't care about the lives which were at stake. these people in pakistan have no value for human life. they just kill people to achieve what they want. bhutto got her own support from people, specially from those who have lost their loved ones and family members, since she also lost her family in violence. just another political game

Her neice feels the same:


via Times of India :

Benazir Bhutto bears the responsibility for the deaths of 139 people in an attack on her homecoming parade by exposing them to danger for the sake of her own "personal theatre", her estranged niece said.

Newspaper columnist and poet Fatima Bhutto, the granddaughter of late Pakistani premier Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, also said in an interview that her aunt's return from exile would plunge the country further into turmoil.

"She insisted on this grand show, she bears a responsibility for these deaths and for these injuries," the 25-year-old said at her plush family home in Karachi two days after the bombings.

Fatima Bhutto is the daughter of former prime minister Benazir's late brother Murtaza, who was killed by police in Karachi in 1996 amid murky circumstances that led to the collapse of her second term in government.

Murtaza led a left-wing extremist group after military ruler Zia-ul-Haq executed Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto in 1979 and then fell out with his sister over what he felt was her betrayal of their father's political legacy.

Murtaza's daughter, often heralded in the Pakistani media as an inheritor of the dynasty's heavy crown and bears a family resemblance to Benazir Bhutto, has recently launched a series of salvos against her aunt.

In the latest Fatima Bhutto accused the opposition leader of protecting herself on her return to Pakistan with an armoured truck, while bussing in hundreds of thousands of supporters despite warnings of an attack.

"They died for this personal theatre of hers, they died for this personal show," she said.

The suicide and grenade blast happened hours after Benazir Bhutto, a two-time premier, flew to Karachi from Dubai. She has blamed Islamic extremists, possibly with links to rogue or former intelligence agents, for the attack.

Her Pakistan People's Party dismissed "senseless accusations" that the 54-year-old was responsible for the deaths, saying it was the government's job to protect its citizens.

"Those who have died, their families are proud of them. The attack was against Benazir Bhutto. All those including ourselves who went there took the risk knowingly," senior party leader Taj Haider said.

Speaking in a sitting room decked with oil paintings of her grandfather, father and other family members -- although not her aunt -- Fatima Bhutto also said her aunt was not the enemy of militancy that she claims to be.

Benazir Bhutto's return to Pakistan was heavily backed by the United States, which sees the Islamic world's first female premier as a potential partner for President Pervez Musharraf, a key US ally in the "war on terror".

"She talks about extremism and nobody else points out that the Taliban was created under her last government," Fatima Bhutto said, referring to the hardline Taliban regime that ruled Afghanistan from 1996 until 2001.

Fatima, educated like her aunt at universities in the United States and Britain, meanwhile condemned the amnesty on corruption charges given to Benazir Bhutto by Musharraf that enabled her to return to the country.

"What this (amnesty) means for this country is very, very frightening," she said.

The younger Bhutto, whose house in the city's seaside Clifton neighbourhood is next door to her grandfather's home, said however that she was not likely to enter Pakistan's turbulent politics any time soon.

She said her newspaper column, which often focuses on political and rights issues, was itself a "political act."

"But as for running for elections, just because I have this last name, I don't think I am entitled to it. I don't think it is a birthright," she said.

"I can't rule anything out for the future, but I think there are a lot of other ways to be political and right now I am choosing this way."



http://www.thecitizenjournalist.org/index.cfm?fa=contentNews.newsDetails&newsID=39086&from=list

kamran1261980
24-10-2007, 06:24 PM
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/main.jhtml?xml=/opinion/2007/10/21/do2102.xml


Benazir Bhutto, a kleptocrat in a Hermes scarf
By Jemima Khan



She's back. Hurrah! She's a woman. She's brave. She's a moderate. She speaks good English. She's Oxford-educated, no less. And she's not bad looking either.

I admit I'm biased. I don't like Benazir Bhutto. She called me names during her election campaign in 1996 and it left a bitter taste. Petty personal grievances aside, I still find jubilant reports of her return to Pakistan depressing. Let's be clear about this before she's turned into a martyr.

This is no Aung San Suu Kyi, despite her repeated insistence that she's "fighting for democracy", or even more incredibly, "fighting for Pakistan's poor".


This is the woman who was twice dismissed on corruption charges. She went into self-imposed exile while investigations continued into millions she had allegedly stashed away into Swiss bank accounts ($1.5 billion by the reckoning of Musharraf's own "National Accountability Bureau").

She has only been able to return because Musharraf, that megalomaniac, knows that his future depends on the grassroots diehard supporters inherited from her father's party, the PPP.

As a result, Musharraf, who in his first months in power declared it his express intention to wipe out corruption, has dropped all charges against her and granted her immunity from prosecution. Forever.

Notably, he did not do the same for his other political rival, Nawaz Sharif, who was recently deported after attempting his own spectacular return to Pakistan.

But the difference is that Benazir is a pro at playing to the West. And that's what counts. She talks about women and extremism and the West applauds. And then conspires.

The Americans and the British are acutely aware that their strategy in the region is failing and that Musharraf's hold on power is ever more tenuous. They have pressed hard for Benazir and the General to cut a deal that would allow them to share power for the next five years in a "liberal forces government".

It's all totally bogus. Benazir may speak the language of liberalism and look good on Larry King's sofa, but both her terms in office were marked by incompetence, extra-judicial killings and brazen looting of the treasury, with the help of her husband — famously known in Pakistan as Mr 10 Per Cent.

In a country that tops the international corruption league, she was its most self-enriching leader.

Benazir has always cynically used her gender to manipulate: I loved her answer to David Frost when he asked her how many millions she had in her Swiss bank accounts. "David, I think that's a very sexist question."

A non sequitur (does loot have a gender?) but one that brought the uncomfortable line of questioning to a swift end.

Of all Pakistan's elected leaders she conspicuously did the least to help the cause of women. She never, for example, repealed the Hudood Ordinances, Pakistan's controversial laws that made no distinction between rape and adultery.

She preferred instead to kowtow to the mullahs in order to cling to power, forming an expedient alliance with Pakistan's Religious Coalition Party and leaving Pakistan's women as powerless as she found them.

The problem is that the West never seems to learn; playing favourites in a complicated nation's politics always backfires. Imposing Benazir on Pakistan is the opposite of democratic and doubtless will cause more chaos in an already unstable country.

Make no mistake, Benazir may look the part, but she's as ruthless and conniving as they come — a kleptocrat in a Hermes headscarf.

blue
25-10-2007, 06:06 AM
yeah rightly said there about bhutto.

2013
25-10-2007, 01:54 PM
good info kamran1261980 thanks for that , interesting isnt it how like thatcher and now clinton people seem to think that because they are women they will be any different to the men in positions of corruption ,sorry power ,gender doesnt come into it, but they play the joker just when people appear to be getting fed up in the hope of pacifying people .
:D