Join us to Seek Justice for Mir Murtaza Bhutto

Saturday, August 8, 2009

Obama's Murderous Guest by Fatima Bhutto

Something rotten has arrived in Washington.

Today, President Barack Obama will shake hands and stage Oval Office photo ops for the first time with the man who many believe stole billions from the Pakistani treasury, empowered Pakistan’s newly formed Taliban by imposing Shariah law without a vote or referendum, and whom I have publicly accused of orchestrating the murder of my father, Murtaza Bhutto, an elected member of parliament until he was killed in 1996.

My father was a vocal critic of both Pakistan’s former prime minister, Benazir Bhutto (his sister, my aunt), and her husband, current president Asif Zardari. He called Zardari and his cronies “Asif Baba and the 40 thieves,” and spoke out against the targeted killings of opposition members and activists by the state’s police and security forces. In the end, my father was slain in an extrajudicial assassination. The fact that he was seen, in a traditionally patriarchal society, as the heir to the Bhutto legacy didn’t make him any safer as Benazir’s second government began to lose power and international repute.

Now in Washington, the man who helped this happen will ask for money and the chance to cling to his dwindling power. Obama, in turn, will ask for results. That's going to be a problem. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has called the situation in my country a threat to universal peace. Richard Holbrooke, Obama’s special envoy for Pakistan, has said our government is capable of fighting terror, but he also calls the region “AfPak” so he's probably confused. President Obama hasn’t offered much of an opinion yet. He has noted that the civilian government has failed to provide its citizens with the most basic services. But he’s also suggested that some hard cash might help the Zardari government through its problems. No, it won’t.

Pakistan has been at war with its own people for a long time now—given the daily politics of persecution that the state machinery inflicts on its own citizens, perhaps it’s only natural that we move on to terrorizing the world at large. The Taliban is waiting at the gates. They are making inroads into the Punjab, the heart of the country, slowly but steadily. Swat has fallen. Buner district is gone, airstrikes or no airstrikes. Now this government has to go. It’s either them or Pakistan.

President Zardari is a man with a colorful history. He is known by many endearing epithets here in Pakistan: Mr. 10 Percent (a reference to kickbacks), Mr. 50 Percent, the First Spouse (twice), and President Ghadari, or “traitor” in Urdu. I might not be the right person to tell his story, given that I believe he was involved in my father’s murder. But, then again, I just might be in the best position to warn President Obama about him.

Last summer, as an odious bill called the National Reconciliation Ordinance expunged from his prison record the four murder cases pending against him—my father’s included—as well as various national and international corruption cases, Zardari prepared himself for power. He did so not only by wiping his criminal slate clean, but also by distancing himself from medical records that showed him to be “a man with multiple and severe physical and mental-health problems,” according to the Financial Times.When Obama meets Zardari in Washington, he should remember that he is meeting not only with a dangerous man, but with an unelected official. Zardari never stood for elections in Pakistan. He has no constituency, no vote of support from the people, no democratic mandate. The “opposition,” the Pakistan Muslim League, is run by Zardari’s frenemy, Nawaz Sharif, also unelected—Pakistan, a nation of 180 million people, is at the mercy of two unelected men. President Obama has to decide this week whether he wants to foster democracy in Pakistan, or whether he wants to have a pliable government in power—a government, it bears noting, that is so inept it managed to grow a local Taliban.

Lest we forget, when Zardari took power last September, Pakistan didn’t have an indigenous Taliban. Now, a year into his rule, the Tehreek-e-Taliban not only exists in Pakistan, but controls the Northwest Frontier Province, frighteningly close to the Afghan border. The reason Pakistan’s government cannot fight the Taliban is not because Pakistan doesn’t have the money to fight terror. We do, plenty of it. By my last count, we’ve received some $12 billion in military aid over the last eight years. (It may not have gone where it was supposed to go, however. It might have ended up in someone’s Swiss bank account—no names, but we can guess.) And it’s not because Pakistanis are rabid fundamentalists elated by the arrival of an indigenous Taliban. That’s not it at all. Pakistan is a religiously diverse country—we have a history of Buddhist, Sikh, and Hindu heritage.

The reason is the leadership. It’s just not working. In the year that Zardari has been president, Pakistan has become a third front in the war on terror. We are not safer, our neighbors are not safer, and we have not made any strides toward fighting fundamentalism.

As much as America finds President Zardari repellent, we in Pakisan do, too. But you made him our president, and now you’re about to give him billions of dollars in aid. We cannot foster any democratic alternatives to Zardari while his government gets bucketloads of American money. Local activists, secular parties, and nascent opposition groups can’t fight that kind of money—it’s impossible to compete with a party that has access to billions of dollars. Pakistan is at a crossroads. We are either going to save our country from its descent into fundamentalism and lawlessness, or we are going to have Zardari as president, bolstered by American aid and support. The ball is in President Obama’s court today. Let’s hope he makes the right decision.


Originally published at:
http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2009-05-05/americas-bad-guy-bailout/

7 comments:

  1. Its the public that kept quiet when Zardari was chosen to be president.There should have been a revolution in the streets of entire Pakistan protesting against this illegal decision. But nobody really cared. Or maybe the mafia elements that support the Govt were just too powerful to be challenged.After all who are the poor masses to challenge the might of the US dollar eh? Whatever it is the damage has been done. Taliban or not Pakistan is sliding downwards towards extreme corruption and autocracy again.The very purpose that Pakistan was created for has failed. Pakistan needs leaders like Fidel Castro and valiant honest people like Che Guevara and the present Chavez of Venezuela. Its the people who choose the leaders. Unfortunately in the case of Pakistan it is the Us dollars that choose a leader.

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  2. The mafia is way to strong. Its not just the case of pakistan everywhere the US dollor is electing the leaders. Where they have failed either those leaders are killed, or are established as the villians of this world. its not just Pakistan that is in dire need of a true leader. If the 3rd world countries are to survive a collective leadership will have to emerge. SZAB came up as a true leader but was killed becoz he was alone.

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  3. SZAB was killed because of a personal vendetta.We must understand that Zia -ul-uq was just an army corporal and took orders from SZAB who constantly humiliated him even before foreign dignitaries. When Zia -ul-huq came into power this was his big moment. He took his sweet revenge as his in built jealousy and frustration grew and developed into a mighty destructive force. Also misunderstood the real teachings of Islam and gave it that typical South Asian colour.South Asian Muslims tend to exaggerate Islam to suit their minds. This is because they do not understand the real meaning of the Quran as they do not understand the Arabic language. Islam is followed as a ritual with the real essence of the Prophets's teachings lost. This again explains the confusion among Pakistan's ethnic population. They have failed to live together as Muslims when the very purpose of Pakistan was intended to create a homeland for the Muslims of British India whose future looked bleak under the ominous Hindu hegemony. The idea of partition was justified but the leaders who took over after the unfortunate immature death of the genius father of the nation could not understand the preciousness of ideal of Pakistan. The holy Prophet said that Islam can survive in the world only if the Umma stood together in total unity. In the case of Pakistan this concept of unity was lost. Greed, narrow mindedness arising from the history of sub-continent lead to ethnic violence and is still continuing by warlords who style themselves as leaders of the country.

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  4. This is what is was made to look like. The assasinition of SZAB was anything but a personal revenge formula. Our big daddies could not bear the concept of a muslim block which was being organized by SZAB.

    I agree with the part that Muslims don't have unity. But is this only true for Pakistan? What about the Arab countries? Had the Arab countries been united the Muslims would not have been suffering in the world like this. They no long think with their own grey matter instead they speak the lang. of petrodollors.

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  5. @Fatima Arif has presented my view-point quite effectively.

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  6. True. It looks like almost the entire Muslim world is suffering from this malaise of disunity. However we do have thankfully interesting exceptions like countries of malaysia,Indonesia and Africa

    The views expressed by Fatima Arif cannot be disputed. If the Arabs were united not just Pakistan but the entire Muslim world would not be in the state as it is today.The problem of Palestine would have been solved.This means half the world's problem would have been solved. But at least the common hatred for Israel is bringing the Arab nations together.
    Again one cannot really compare the situation of Arab disunity with that of Pakistan. Arabs did not fight desperately to carve out a nation for themselves. They already have one in the form of many countries since the earliest of centuries.The wealth with which they have blessed with has ruined their sanity.

    The reason why Pakistan should be different and stronger in unity is because it was achieved miraculously by the political astuteness of some very brave and intelligent people and made to happen by a super intelligent leader like the Qaid. The Government and the people of Pakistan should realise the preciousness of this achievement and honour those founders of Pakistan by striving to keep together the country as one nation no matter what be the odds.
    Pakistan does have a difficult choice apparently. But this can be solved by the magic of Islamic unity. Just follow Islam the way it should be instead of allowing shirk to creep in.
    Sharia can be implemented in certain cases.
    Above all the real teachings of Islam should be understood and practised. Principles like charity,sharing of wealth and complete justice for all citizens putting aside narrow minded ethnic and linguistic differences aside.

    Islam has a solution for every problem in life.
    The reason why Pakistan is faced with a struggle is because its leaders have violated the elementary principles of Islam. Or they simply do not understand it.

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  7. I dont see the Arab world comming together against Israel.

    Agreed that we are wrong in a lot of matters but then Pakistan was created a moth eaten country, designed so that it does not survive for long but we some how still managed to survivr for 63 years.

    Yes, Islam has the solution to every problem but the one's who claim to be the champions of the religion have used it for political reasons (the biggest culprit in this regard being General Zia). You mentioned implementation of Sharia law. In Pakistan people who intrepret Sharia are Mullahs not Religious schlors & their intrepretation results in hadood ordinance, public floggings.

    Our system is rotton to the core.

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