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Sunday, May 22, 2011

Globetrotter: Fatima Bhutto

Writer, journalist, activist, indeed there is more to Fatima Bhutto than just a famous surname. We pulled out some notes from her travel diary.

1. Last holiday
I spent two weeks in Brazil last September. I began with Rio de Janeiro and did all the thrilling touristy things.

2. A book or film that gave you a new insight to a city

Two in fact. Bad Times in Buenos Aires, a book by Miranda France, is of course about the vibrant Argentine capital. An Iranian film, The Lizard, is a hilarious portrayal of the privileges the clergy enjoy in Iran.

3. A destination you did on a shoestring budget

Cuba. I went as a journalist ahead of the 50th anniversary of the Revolution. Once I was through with work, two of my best friends joined me and we travelled from Havana to Trinidad and then to Santa Clara for a bit of a Che Guevara pilgrimage.

4. Most extravagant holiday

Oddly, it wasn't exactly a holiday but attending the Ubud Literary Festival in Bali was heavenly.'

5. A souvenir you've just picked up

I don't pick up souvenirs as such, but everywhere I go, I send a postcard to my brother Zulfi.

6. Three things you carry to make travel comfortable

A travel pillow; my notebook; a scarf--I'm always cold!

7. A destination that pleasantly surprised you

Stockholm. I thought it would be mind-numbingly boring, but it turned out to be quite radical.

8. Most overrated city/sight/experience

Marrakech. Everything in the city, from its food markets to its donkey carts, is too touristy for my liking.

Fatima's travel wishlist:
Argentina: Colourful, energetic... This country has very positive vibes.
Colombia: I guess I have to attribute it to a South American fixation.
South Africa: It is one of the places left over from my original wishlist.


Friday, May 20, 2011

AUTHOR INTERVIEW: Fatima Bhutto Written by: Fancy Goods

Last year we spoke to Fatima Bhutto, author ofSongs of Blood and Sword (Vintage), for our ‘on tour’ interview. Bhutto was due to appear at the Byron Bay Writers Festival, but was forced to pull out in the last minute. Happily, she has finally arrived in Australia, this time as a guest of theSydney Writers’ Festival.

Who is the ideal reader for your book?
Anyone curious about Pakistan. Or the devastating effects of power.

What do you think of the Australian cover?
I’m thrilled—can’t wait to finally come and see the Australian print of the book in person as opposed to tiny email attachments …

What’s the best thing about book tours?
Best thing?

And the worst thing?
You’re away from writing, you have to speak to journalists all day long, there’s no time to read, I could go on …

What are you reading right now?
Before Night Falls
by Reinaldo Arenas (Serpent’s Tail) and The Memory of Love by Aminatta Forna (Bloomsbury).

What book do you wish you could have written?
The History of Love
by Nicole Krauss (Penguin). It’s such a beautiful, tender novel. It’s in my top five.

What book would you want with you on a desert island?
Can I not have a shelf? Something to keep the gloom away by David Sedaris. Fitzgerald for warmth. Alain de Botton to keep my questions alive.

Typewriter or computer?
Computer, no doubt.

Hardback, paperback or digital?
Hardback. Never, ever digital.

If you weren’t a writer, what would you be?
I wouldn’t.

If I were a literary character I’d be …
My favourite character of all time is Atticus Finch. I wish I could be him.


Source: http://www.fancygoods.com.au/fancy-goods/2011/05/20/author-interview-fatima-bhutto/

Thursday, May 12, 2011

Fatima Bhutto on murder, assassination and her family 'cult'

The history of Pakistan's powerful Bhutto family is written in blood, with murder, assassination and mysterious death commonplace. A young member of this cursed clan, Fatima, born to privilege but now in constant peril, tells the shocking inside story to William Langley.

Fatima Bhutto is chic, petite and beautiful, but the story she tells is awash with blood and treachery. Born into one of the world's great political dynasties, she relates its fortunes with an insider's candour, but it would take a Shakespeare, a Homer or a Cecil B. DeMille to do the job properly.

An outline of the plot might run like this... In ancient times, a warrior tribe settles in a remote area of what is now southern Pakistan. One family eventually becomes pre-eminent, its fortunes built on an ability to out-scheme its rivals, and in time the whole country falls into its hands. Then things start to go wrong.

The revered patriarch bequeaths power to his beautiful, autocratic daughter, but her rule is tainted by corruption and excess. Her younger brother dies in mysterious circumstances; her older brother rebels against her and is murdered. Her favourite niece accuses the new ruler of plotting against her own kin. The matriarch is driven into exile, where she seethes and conspires, and finally returns, only to be assassinated.

Fatima, the 28-year-old inheritor of these chronicles of mayhem, is sitting in a London theatre cafe — a glossy, engaging presence with movie-star looks and a mind that wastes no time on sentiment. The Bhuttos have dominated Pakistan's politics for decades and, even as a little girl, Fatima basked in the glow of specialness, doted on by her relatives and raised with an exalted sense of destiny. Today, though, far from home, she seems scared and lost — disillusioned with what her family has wrought and threatened in her home country for having breached the Bhuttos' hallowed code of silence.

She describes the family as "a cult" and argues that its insatiable hunger for power has corroded its collective soul. "There's this idea," she says, "that if you are a Bhutto, the people owe you a blood debt and you are entitled not just to be in charge, but to have this kind of other-worldly standing, and the whole thing badly needs demystifying."

Fatima's sense that her privileged birthright might be something other than an advantage began when, aged 14 and cowering with her younger brother in an upstairs room of the family home in Karachi, she heard her father being mowed down in a hail of bullets. Only later, still raw with grief, did she come to the conclusion that her aunt, Benazir, had ordered his death. "My papa was a wonderful man," she says. "When that happens to you, it changes everything."

Mir Murtaza Bhutto, the charismatic, 42-year-old elder son of family patriarch Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, had recently returned to Pakistan after several years of self-imposed exile. He had voiced stinging criticisms of Benazir, then in her second term as prime minister, and the tensions between them were steadily worsening.

On September 20, 1996, an armed police unit arrived at Murtaza's house, apparently with orders to arrest him on charges of subversion. Up in her room, Fatima heard the sirens, the car doors slamming, the shouting and, finally, a long burst of gunfire. "My little brother said, 'Why are they letting off fireworks?'," she recalls, "but I knew it was more than that."

The police would not let anyone leave the house. Desperate for information, Fatima telephoned Benazir's private office. The teenager and her powerful aunt had always been close. "We were each other's favourites," she says. "When I was little, we used to laugh and eat disgustingly sticky sweets together. She was always kind to me." Surely, Benazir would help.

Instead, the call was taken by Benazir's husband, Asif Zardari — now the president of Pakistan — who informed Fatima that Benazir was unavailable. "But why?," she persisted. "It's her niece. I have to speak to her."

"Oh, don't you know?" replied Asif, coolly. "Your papa's been shot."

Fatima's belief that Benazir was behind her father's murder has only strengthened with the years and it lies at the core of her controversial new book, Songs Of Blood And Sword. To many people around the world, Benazir was an authentic heroine — a champion of democracy, free expression and women's rights in a corner of the world heavily identified with bearded men waving Korans and setting fire to American flags.

"I completely understand why she was so admired," says Fatima. "In Pakistan, too, when she became prime minister, it was as though she was carrying all our hopes and dreams, and there was this virtual adoration of her and a longing for her to do well. But the truth is that power changed Benazir and once she had it, she became a very different person.

"The West didn't notice the change so much. It carried on seeing a political pin-up. Here was a woman running an Islamic country, she was beautiful, she spoke very good English, she said all the right things and it all made her extremely acceptable.

"But what we saw in Pakistan was corruption, abuse of power and absolutely nothing being done to improve the country. And this woman, who was supposed to be a figurehead of women's rights, who spoke out for full democracy, was one of just three world leaders to recognise the Taliban. So that was the Benazir we had to live with."

However intoxicated Benazir had become with power, could she really have ordered the execution of her own brother? Fatima wishes she could believe otherwise, yet such horrors, she says, are the poisonous legacy of the Bhutto cult.

"It's terribly painful for me to think of her this way," says Fatima, who is coming to Australia in May for the Sydney Writers' Festival. "I loved her when I was young. I wanted nothing more than to be around her and it was partly because she was an incredibly vulnerable woman who was extraordinarily brave, and even as a child, you felt that you wanted to protect her and that she needed you to be there.

"So I watched her change from someone who suffered into someone who caused suffering, from someone who knocked down walls into someone who built them and from someone who fought against oppression into someone who would tolerate absolutely no criticism, and that was the nature of the beast."

In 1996, Benazir was driven from office and spent much of the next decade living abroad, mostly in London and Dubai, in a state of luxurious frustration. In 2007, aged 54, she returned to Pakistan, intent on regaining power. On the night of December 27, as she left an election rally in Rawalpindi attended by hundreds of thousands of supporters, a suicide attacker first opened fire on her, hitting her in the neck, then detonated a bomb. She was pronounced dead on arrival at hospital.

Fatima's huge, chocolatey eyes moisten as she recalls her aunt's all-too-foreseeable death. Although estranged, the two women were irrevocably bound together by the Bhutto bloodlines and a shared sense of fate. "I cried for the next five days," writes Fatima in her book. "By the time I had drained myself of tears, I had cried for everyone."

Whatever Benazir's other failings, no one could accuse her of lacking courage. She had been repeatedly warned that Pakistan's violent jihadis — adherents of a bleak mediaeval theology who despised her both as a woman and a politician — were out to kill her. She took no notice. "I am not afraid of dying," she said shortly after arriving back in Pakistan. "When it comes, it comes. It doesn't scare me. They can kill me, but they can't kill democracy."

Her death was one more milestone in the Bhuttos' tragic history. Fatima's grandfather, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, a former prime minister, was hanged by a military junta in 1979 and her uncle, Shahnawaz, was found dead, apparently poisoned, at his home on the French Riviera in 1985. "Benazir had a saying," muses Fatima. " 'Kill a Bhutto, get a Bhutto', and it is a kind of truth."

Today, Fatima feels her own position threatened. Her book is a runaway best-seller, which has not only made her enemies, but also established her — unwillingly — in Pakistan as a symbol of opposition to the government. She worries for her safety, but says she'll never leave the country. "I don't intend to run for anything [politically]," she says. "I just don't believe in birthright politics. How can you honestly argue for democracy when you are trading on your name?

"During the last election, I went out on the streets, trying to get women, particularly, to vote. And I met quite a lot of them who would say, 'Well, we're going to vote for Benazir'. And I would say, 'But you can't, she's dead', and they'd look a little hurt and say, 'Well, we want to anyway'.

"That's what the Bhuttos have created. People don't vote for ideas. They vote for ghosts."


Source: http://aww.ninemsn.com.au/news/newsstories/8247205/fatima-bhutto-on-murder-assassination-and-her-family-cult?

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Pakistan Is Playing Dumb

The Islamabad establishment has been feigning ignorance for years. Fatima Bhutto on the price ordinary Pakistanis pay as their leaders allow the country to fall apart.

For twenty four hours after Osama bin Laden was (or was he?) shot dead with two bullets to the face by Navy SEALs from the Joint Special Operations Command—“sort of like Murder Incorporated,” a former colonel explained to author Jeremy Scahill—no one heard a peep out of Pakistan’s president. Normally ensconced so securely within the president’s house in Islamabad, venturing out only for foreign junkets and dealing with domestic bothers from behind his fortified walls, President Asif Ali Zardari had met the news that the world’s most wanted man was killed two hours away from his nation’s capital with catatonic silence.

Instead of a televised address to the nation or a press release, he did what all hapless leaders do when in trouble—Zardari wrote an op-ed for The Washington Post. Claiming that his government had no role in the killing, he waxed lyrical about his personal travails. He applauded Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, seconded President Obama’s morally ambiguous speech, and resurrected nothing short of a stump speech for why his government should please be left in power because they really are very democratic even though Zardari himself was never elected to office.

It is not surprising that Pakistan’s president would insist he had no idea bin Laden was living comfortably in one of the country’s most famous garrison towns—the Pakistani establishment has been feigning ignorance for years.

It takes a certain aplomb to insist that you didn’t know Public Enemy No. 1 was living in your country—and in a leafy city, not in a South Waziristani cave; that American helicopters entered your airspace, perhaps using one of your air bases at Tarbela Ghazi; and that the Americans had been planning to take out said Public Enemy No. 1 for the past nine months. The modus operandi of recent years has been to look the other way while keeping their purse at the open.

This is not unique to Zardari—when asked on local television about this business of Osama really having chosen Pakistan as his home away from home, former President General Pervez Musharraf responded vaguely that it wasn’t sensible for people to have harped on and on without the facts all those years ago. When asked, he always went with the same safe answer: I don’t know. For this sort of clarity and “cooperation,” Pakistan has taken just about $1 billion in American aid a year since 2001. But the money doesn’t only keep Zardari or Musharraf and their flunkies in power, it comes with a very serious price for Pakistanis.

If everyone was so clever and the U.S. had been privy to bin Laden's not-so-secret location (Pakistan claims to be, as ever, the last to find out) since August 2010, how does one explain the ferocious drone campaign that took place from September to December of that year? In the span of 102 days, an unprecedented 52 drone strikes were launched against Pakistan, none targeting Abbottabad or its environs. President Obama ratcheted up the drone war almost immediately upon entering the White House—ordering his first strike against Pakistan 72 hours after assuming the presidency. Some 2,000 Pakistanis (largely civilians) have been killed, none of whom happened to be bin Laden or any of his dastardly lieutenants like Mullah Omar or Ayman al Zawahri, and yet the U.S. defense budget has called for a 75 percent increase in funds to continue and enhance drone operations. This is a frightening development.

Pakistan’s trials don’t start and end with Osama bin Laden. On May 2, the commercial capital city of Karachi was on fire. Dozens of vehicles were torched and gunfire broke out in the busy Malir neighborhood—across the city, people were told to stay at home. The violence had nothing to do with bin Laden, but with the murder of a former member of parliament.

The country is gripped by bloodletting—Baloch dissidents have disappeared in the thousands, a sinister byproduct of our government’s engagement in the war on terror. The price of basic foodstuffs skyrockets as government industrialists and feudal landowners hoard basics like sugar and set the price of wheat far above international prices, all the while presiding over sectarian and ethnic violence not seen since the mid-1990s.

Maybe it’s not peculiar that the government claims to have known nothing about bin Laden's killing. They never seem to have any idea what’s happening in their country at all.