Join us to Seek Justice for Mir Murtaza Bhutto

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Zardari a criminal, claims Benazir Bhutto's niece Fatima




Pakistan's President Asif Ali Zardari is corrupt and plotted his brother-in-law's death, claimed Fatima Bhutto, the niece of Zardari's late wife, Benazir Bhutto, in an interview on a visit to Paris Saturday.

Fatima Bhutto doesn’t mince words when it comes to Asif Ali Zardari, widower of her aunt Benazir Bhutto and the current president of Pakistan.

“It’s not the first time that criminals have come to lead nations but it is distressing to watch the White House, 10 Downing Street [the UK], the European Union support a man who before he became the president was fighting corruption cases in Switzerland and Spain and England and four charges of murder in Pakistan,” she says.

Well, at least she’s not satirising the president, an offence which, she has just told the audience at Paris bookshop Shakespeare and Co’s literary festival, now carries a sentence of six to 13 years in jail.


Bhutto holds Zardari responsible for the 1996 murder of her father, Murtaza, the subject of her book Songs of Blood and Sword, from which she has just read to the festival audience.


The future president served time from 1997 to 2004 on corruption and murder charges relating to that case and others. He was freed by a judge who declared the charges false and Zardari and his supporters claim that the charges were politically motivated.


The current Pakistani president has served two other terms in jail, having won the nickname “Mr Ten Per Cent” for his alleged propensity for corruption when serving as a minister in his wife’s first government from 1987-1990. As Fatima Bhutto points out, both Benazir and Zardari have faced corruption cases outside Pakistan. The Swiss case was dropped in 2008, on the request of the Pakistani government, but corruption officials have now asked for it to be reopened.


Fatima Bhutto tends to believe all the accusations against her uncle by marriage, who became president after the fall of General-President Pervez Musharraf and the assassination of Benazir on her return from exile in 2007.


She doesn’t seem to believe that he has changed his ways once in office, either, even if she can cite no evidence at the moment.


“Unfortunately, the information comes after they tend to leave power but, you know, certainly the corruption seems to be carrying on unhindered,” she says.


“It’s a country that’s facing 20-hour electricity cuts in the winter and 23-hour cuts in the summer. There’s intense censorship in the country … So I think, unfortunately, we don’t have any evidence to the contrary.”


Zardari inherited his political legitimacy – and thus the presidency – from his wife. She was prime minister twice and led of the People’s Party (PPP), a position she in turn inherited from her father and Fatima’s grandfather, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. His premiership in the 1970s was brought to an end by a military coup and his own execution, allegedly on the orders of military dictator Muhammad Zia ul-Haq.


Two of Fatima’s uncles have also been killed, so it is a dangerous business being a Bhutto. But it also means that you are part of one of the five families which have a stranglehold on Pakistan’s politics.


The PPP clearly intends the dynasty to continue. Before her death, Benazir made it clear that her son, Bilawal, should succeed her. Despite the fact that he is currently studying at Britain’s Oxford University and has limited political experience, the party dutifully appointed him joint chairman along with his father after his mother’s death.


Fatima Bhutto did not go into politics. She chose writing, inspired, she says, by books like Malcolm X’s autobiography, British journalist Robert Fisk’s book on Lebanon Pity the Nation and the novels The Great Gatsby and To Kill a Mockingbird.


And, although her mother heads a breakaway faction of the PPP, she lambasts the control of the country’s economy by 27 families and its politics by five.


“I think absolutely it’s time for all the dynasties to butt out and it’s time for the field to be opened up beyond five families or six families.”


So who would take over?


“Well, the people, you know. In a county of 180 million people there have to be more choices than just the usual suspects."


She points to gang-rape victim Mukhtar Mai, who has become a women’s rights campaigner, and the missing persons campaign, started by relatives of people kidnapped by the police and intelligence agencies, as evidence of potential leaders from outside the English-speaking elite.


“Pakistani women, they’ve got guts,” she told the book fanciers’ gathering.


A recent report by former Oxfam official Matt Waldman and released by the London School of Economics accused Pakistan’s spies, the Inter-Services Intelligence Agency (ISI), of deep involvement with the Taliban.


It even claimed that Zardari visited Taliban leaders in jail and promised them support in operations, once they were released. That charge has been hotly denied by the government and greeted with scepticism by many commentators.


But no-one seriously doubts that the ISI were involved with the Taliban and other Islamist armed groups from the beginning, in the aftermath of their US-backed involvement with the mujahedin who fought the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan.


“To assume that that’s ended miraculously I think is a bit naïve,” comments Fatima Bhutto, who appeals to world powers to pull out of her country.


“The world has to divest from Pakistan,” she says. “To keep giving the Pakistani state, a state that is totally unaccountable and totally untransparent 12 billion dollars in the Bush era and just about 10 billion dollars in the Obama era is not going to make anything easier – it’s going to make it harder.”


But, with Islamabad “the third front” in what she calls “this odious war on terror”, her wish may not be granted any day soon.


Source:: http://www.english.rfi.fr/asia-pacific/20100621-zardari-criminal-claims-benazir-bhuttos-niece-fatima

Friday, June 25, 2010

Monday, June 21, 2010

I despise the corrupt: Fatima Bhutto




Writer Fatima Bhutto wishes she was immune to high fever, loathes dictators and identifies with Micheal Corleone (in Part I, not Part II).

What is your idea of perfect happiness?
Justice.

What is your greatest fear?
That power and violence conspire so that injustice prevails.

What do you consider the most overrated virtue?
Silence.

On what occasion do you lie?
There’s never a good reason, though I know (did I say know? I meant, am related to) a few congenital liars who would disagree with me…

What do you most dislike about your appearance?
As a teenager I felt I had been robbed of great height. I’m fine now though.

Which living person do you most despise?

I despise the corrupt, who believe that power is an excuse for violence and injustice, those who follow the dictates of fear over principles, David Miliband, proponents of censorship, Ariel Sharon and bigots of all persuasions.

What is the quality you most like in a man?

Warm heart, clean hands, cool mind. Obviously that includes a sense of humour and some serious IQ points.

What is the quality you most like in a woman?
Bravery, independence and ethics. The ability to be a trailblazer. Same as above really.

Which words or phrases do you most overuse?
Depends on who I’m talking to. Basically, mind your own beeswax.

Which talent would you most like to have?
High hay fever immunity, I’ve decided that’s a talent worth having.

If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?
My embarrassing turn in regards to Twitter. I love it, but I sincerely hope it’s just a phase.

Where would you most like to live?

Karachi, always. It’s my city by the sea.

What do you regard as the lowest depth of misery?
Corruption, moral, political and financial. It is the absence of dignity and justice.

If you didn’t do your current job, what would you choose to do?
I would do what I do, writing, thank you very much.

What is your most marked characteristic?
You’d have to ask those closest to me, but I think I have moxie.

Who is your hero of fiction?
Atticus Finch.

Which historical figure do you most identify with?
At a talk on Songs of Blood and Sword in London recently, the moderator was Michael Radford, a great director. He told me he had worked with Al Pacino and that I reminded him of Michael Corleone (the early days, Part I not Part II – that’s an important distinction that mafia movie fans will appreciate). I’m not sure he meant it as a compliment, but I took it as one.

Who are your heroes in real life?
Dennis Dalton, my mother Ghinwa, my brothers Zulfi and Mir Ali, Malcolm X, Seymour Hersh, Fred Hampton, the Pakistanis who brought the world’s attention to the citizens disappeared by the state as part of the war on terror, all those who fight against the violence of their states, Henry Porter, Dr Mubashir Hasan.

What’s your favourite quote?
“The struggle of people against power is the struggle of memory against forgetting” Milan Kundera.

How many hours of loadshedding did you experience yesterday?
As I’m on my book tour I’ve managed to escape KESC’s criminal loadshedding, which is no longer a summer feature but a year round delight. That said, while in Bangalore I had about a minute’s worth of loadshedding (it was impressively short), and last week while in a London cinema the bijli went and the film reel burned. I felt blissfully at home.


Source: http://tribune.com.pk/story/22018/%e2%80%9ci-despise-the-corrupt-who-believe-that-power-is-an-excuse-for-violence-and-injustice%e2%80%9d-fatima-bhutto/?sms_ss=twitter

SOAS-Alumni Conversations: Fatima Bhutto



Writer, Journalist and the granddaughter of former Pakistan Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, the niece of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, and daughter of Murtaza Bhutto, Fatima was born in a political family in Pakistan. She currently writes columns for The Daily Beast, the New Statesman and other publications. In this interview, Fatima speaks to Marcus Duran about her early years, the time she spent as a student at SOAS in London, and her new book, Songs of Blood and Sword.


http://www.openair.fm/soasalumni/471-alumni-conversations-fatima-bhutto

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Campaign For Justice for Mir Murtaza Bhutto- June



They say neither evolution nor revolution take place in one day, both of them require long stretches of time. With this law the concept of patience comes for free. Those aiming for a revolution should make patience part for their nature. This is not just needed for attaining the goal of revolution but for the attaining it in the right manner.

A hasty revolutionary path leads to the wrong results, the wrong kind of compromises & once this cycle starts there is no turning back. Without patience the struggle goes down the drain, the sacrifices wasted, the blood traded. And most of all to bear all the pain which comes to those who have chosen this path, they need to hold on to patience.

However, patience does not mean silence in the face of injustice, corruption & everything that the people have been fighting for. When the limits are crossed it is a call for action. People blamed them for all the wrong that happened & that will happen but they did what was needed to be done.

Looking back they have nothing to be ashamed of.

~Fatima Arif







In Solidarity
Fatima Bhutto Fan club





Disclaimer: None of the views expressed here are of Fatima Bhutto or any of her family members. These are views of the team...

Copyright: Fatima Bhutto Fan club.
Please do not reproduce this anywhere without permission.

Friday, June 11, 2010

STARDUST- Fatima Bhutto

FATIMA BHUTTO
-- k k rai

She’s beautiful, articulate and intelligent. In her book Songs of Blood and Sword,
Fatima Bhutto does not hold back the punches


When the Sania Mirza-Shoaib Malik ‘yes-I’m-married-no-I’m-not’ controversy was raging, someone posted this on Twitter, ‘Now that Sania Mirza is going to Pakistan, can we have Fatima Bhutto in exchange?’

Humour aside, it’s easy to see why Fatima Bhutto is everyone’s darling—she comes from a powerful bloodline of a neighbouring country with whom our relationship has always been complicated, barring a fleeting envy for their cricketers and their culinary traditions. But our reaction to Fatima Bhutto has been different. She has a personal story that’s tormented by tragedy… the exile and subsequent bloody deaths of her family members, most of them untimely and gruesome and now, there is a brief flash of vindication, when she tries to resurrect her slain father, Mir Murtaza Bhutto’s image in her tell-all book Songs of Blood and Sword (SOBAS, Penguin).

In it she accuses her aunt the late Benazir Bhutto, former Prime Minister of Pakistan and her husband, Asif Ali Zardari of murdering her father. That the alleged murderer of her father is now Pakistan’s President, makes Fatima’s unequivocal stand on her father’s killers a bold admission, one that fills her readers with both a grudging pride for this young 28-year-old and a little frisson of fear for her outspoken stance. Says Fatima, “At the launch of the book in Karachi, we had 700 people attending. We fought hard despite a lot of resistance to have it at the Clifton (the area where the Bhutto house is located and Murtaza was killed). That should say something for the citizens who came out in solidarity since the book accuses their President of murder.”

Fatima is not sure how her book is being received in Pakistan or if copies have mysteriously disappeared off the shelf. “I haven’t had time to check on that. I came to India as soon as the book was launched in Pakistan on March 30. It may not attract censorship yet since the book is in English and not so many people would read it in English. I’m trying to get it translated into Urdu, Baluchi and other local languages,” says she like a woman on a mission.

It’s a tough life for a young woman like Fatima in a country like Pakistan. She seems to be the lone spokesperson from the Bhutto clan to speak out fearlessly. “Who else is there? There’s just Sassi (Shahnawaz’s daughter), Zulfikar (Fatima’s younger brother) and me.” She hasn’t met Benazir’s children for many years now. “That door closed a long time ago,” she says. But then her life has been anything but ordinary. Her earliest memories are of living with her father Murtaza, who was in exile in Damascus. She was three then. “By the time I was three years old, I was aware of words like martial law, dictatorship and gallows. I thought they were part of every child’s vocabulary,” she says.

Like the heirs of many political families in South East Asia, Fatima has had to live with the ghosts of her family members, slain in Pakistan’s violent political history. A heavy price to pay for being powerbrokers in the then newly created state of Pakistan! She’s lost a family member every decade for the last four decades. The last two deaths of her father and her aunt will always haunt her. Her aunt’s death she can’t shake off, try as she might. She will always be Benazir Bhutto’s niece.

She speaks at length of her aunt, her father’s alleged nemesis, as if she’s studied her every action, recorded it for posterity and done a near-forensic examination. Fatima says in her book that Benazir reminded her of herself. It’s a resemblance that others have noticed too. Fatima was seven when she returned to Pakistan and the first thing that fascinated her was the “nuclear green fizzy drink” that she found there.

But even as a self-confessed precocious child, Fatima says she was scared of the crowds. “When I went back, I saw Benazir surrounded by crowds. In a way, they made her inaccessible to me and yet I was scared for her. She was my wadi, who read out stories to me when I was a child. But she made a lot of compromises with regard to our foreign policy and succumbing to IMF dictates. It was a very different trajectory that she took from that of my grandfather Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, my father and uncle Shahnawaz Bhutto. They were anti-American interference and Benazir undid a lot of my grandfather’s legacy.’’

Fatima dresses unlike her wadi. During the day, as she is giving interviews, she’s in a pair of blue jeans, a black t-shirt and a long sheer printed Afghani coat. For her book launch, she comes dressed in a dull-gold sari and a halter-neck blouse, scarlet lipstick and nail paint. “My grandmother, Nusrat Bhutto, always wore saris and short sleeved blouses for official events. We were brought up in a very liberal way at home. Politics is the practice of expediency. When Benazir was free from power, she was a brave woman, who travelled to remote places and made them forget she was a woman. When she came to power she wore a scarf over her head, the first woman in the family to do so, only to keep certain people happy. For the women in Pakistan, it was a big step back.”

SOBAS is crafted like a journalist’s report. Noting an instance when Benazir returned from exile and stepped out of the plane with a dove whose wings had been clipped, Fatima says, “There’s a lot of strange use of imagery in South East Asian politics. What Benazir did to that bird was what she did to democracy.” Fatima admits that she’s always wanted to be a journalist and her heroes have always been journalists. Fatima, who studied at the Columbia University and the School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London, writes columns for the New Statesman and The Daily Beast among other publications.

If only she’s given a penny for every time she has been asked, ‘why not politics?’ “Legacy is a dirty word. The idea that only one line can possess history is so wrong. When Benazir was killed, we (Pakistan) started acting like 14th century France, believing that unless there was someone close to the family in power, the country would perish. They were not asking for platforms, issues, healthcare, food, water or load-shedding. They just wanted to co-opt someone from the family.” At that time, it was her 17-year-old brother Zulfikar.

Fatima avers that she is politically active and campaigns for her father’s party, Pakistan People’s Party—Shaheed Bhutto, that is now headed by Ghinwa Bhutto, Mir Murtaza’s second wife, whom Fatima calls ‘Mummy’. Fatima’s relationship with her estranged biological mother, Fowzia had been tenuous since the beginning and she now lives with Ghinwa and her half brother Zulfikar. Fatima who campaigned door to door to get women to come out and vote says, “I’ve always felt that there must be something wrong with people who campaign. It’s a tough job. But I do it since I like to travel and meet people.”

Fatima’s fight to bring her father’s killers to book through her writings has been dismissed by some of her critics as a naïve effort. When asked about this, she says, “Not at all. We see corruption everywhere. And where we see injustice, we have the freedom to fight it. It is our civic duty to raise our voice. I don’t think it is naïve at all. One should always hope for justice. Giving up hope for justice, is allowing justice to be denied to us. The road to justice is long. Mummy (Ghinwa) and I are very clear that we’re not going to use violence or revenge. We seek justice and truth. Mummy is Lebanese and she understands violence more than I do. We don’t believe in death penalty. We’re protesting the extra judicial killings of not just my father but many other people and hope that justice will be done.’’

Mir Murtaza was vehemently against American interference in Pakistan’s politics but present day Pakistan is a far cry from what he wanted. Says Fatima, “It is the new colonial power. But we have history on our side. SE Asia has a history of overthrowing colonial powers. And now with the Internet, You tube and other sources of information, more people are aware of political assassinations as game changers.”

Her tweets indicate that her reception in India has been overwhelming. “Governments have failed. People never do. We need more people to people contact. When authors come and build bridges, you realise that Pakistanis don’t have horns. I can’t remember my family portraying India or Indians as very different from us. All I remember was that there was lots of Bollywood at home, lots of Amitabh and Rekha movies, and achaar with every meal. We must see that what has happened will not happen again,” she ends hopefully.<<>

Courtesy: Society

Source:

http://www.magnamags.com/index.php/201005106179/society/society-says-so/fatima-bhutto.html