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PAKISTAN

Still in Control

How will Musharraf's decision to postpone Pakistan's elections affect the fortunes of Benazir Bhutto's political party?

B.K.Bangash / AP
'We don't believe in the politics of confrontation': Bhutto's widower, Asif Ali Zadari, at a press conference on Jan. 2
 
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Pervez Musharraf was calm, confident and—despite a flurry of rumors—not about to announce his resignation. Instead, the Pakistani president's "concession" to his troubled nation was an announcement that he would allow Britain's Scotland Yard to help local law enforcement agencies with their investigation into last week's assassination of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto. Speaking in a nationally televised address two hours after Pakistan's election commission announced the postponement of the ballot to Feb. 18, six weeks later than had been scheduled, Musharraf was notably deferential in his remarks about Bhutto, often invoking her "martyrdom" and extolling her liberal democratic credentials. "May she go to heaven," he said. "I stand for the same things she said."

Imploring the media not to "compound the confusion" over Bhutto's assassination, he said his request for Scotland Yard assistance had been accepted by the British government. "I want to get to the bottom of this," he said, adding that new evidence and deficiencies in local expertise had informed his decision. Until today Musharraf's government, including the interim prime minister, had rejected repeated demands from Bhutto's party and the local and foreign press for such an inquiry.

As expected, Musharraf blamed the electoral postponement on the rioting and looting across Pakistan, particularly in Sind province. "I know people feel sad, despondent and angry," he said. "I feel the same way." Musharraf said troops were being called out, for a period likely to extend beyond the new polling date, to restore normalcy to Pakistan's streets—by force, if necessary. "People are roaming around with machine guns and rocket launchers, and there is a political and ethnic tint to the violence," he said.

Musharraf held Islamic militants Baitullah Mehsud in South Waziristan and Fazal Ullah in the Swat district responsible for the recent attacks on his former ministers, soldiers and employees of the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) spy agency. "These same people assassinated Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto," he said pointedly, using a term of respect for the slain leader. Musharraf called on the people and media to "launch a campaign" against the two militants.

Many Pakistanis were skeptical about Musharraf's comments. "Musharraf wants a popular and media campaign against Baitullah Mehsud," said Syed Mansoor Hussain, a columnist for an English-language newspaper in Lahore. "How about a military campaign instead?"

Asif Zardari, Bhutto's husband and co-chairman of her Pakistan People's Party, also rejected Musharraf's remarks, saying that he was still pressing for a United Nations inquiry similar to the one conducted after the killing of former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri. "We don't believe in the politics of confrontation," a visibly upset Zardari told a media conference in Naudero soon after Musharraf's televised appearance. "We want to tell the administration not to force our hand." Claiming that thousands of PPP workers had been jailed, Zardari also invoked powerful Shia iconography, the martyrdom of Prophet Muhammad's grandson, in his attack on Musharraf's political party. "The 'murderer league' has disrupted the caravan of Hussain," he said.

 
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Member Comments
  • Posted By: Waseem A @ 01/08/2008 11:34:58 AM

    Comment: Zardari is in grief Only God knows that, as a humans we share Bhutto family loss. Looking back at him he is a little more than a thug. He has been one of the main reason for Bhutto's exit from P.M ship 2 times.

    Her biggest error was openly accepting to be a stooge for foriegn power,(s), and announcements like " I will do what they want me too".

    She was a woman who hardly listened toany one, she came on a deal, she was pardoned off her criminal charges and given a chance to work with Mr. Musharraf, she never did that.

    She was not popular among many Islamists and had many enemies back from her ruling days.

    Zardari was famous as r.10 percent, a man who is one of the richest men in Pak now with an estimatedworth of over USD 2 billion dollars.

    He has no right to be the chairman of PPP, Benazir treated PPP as her personal property, and that was un democrated itself. She is gone and we are sad lets move on.
    No one else but Pakistan comes first.

  • Posted By: Kisakhani @ 01/06/2008 8:20:26 PM

    Comment: Why was Zardari missing from her side, ever since Benazir God bless her landed to start her campaign! He
    wanted to show others that the news of her death was not acceptable,until he saw it himself. Next he made
    sure that no postmortem was held. On the other hand the government kept making somersaults in the water
    and not in the air, less the fall broke their spine.

  • Posted By: TASNEEM KHAN @ 01/06/2008 11:58:13 AM

    Comment: Asif Ali Zardari stands nowhere in today's Pakistani politics, not in even coming future will he be able to brihten his personality at the cost of Benazir's death. While much of the population did condemn the assassination, still, people were not interested in bringing another member of the Bhutto clan into power. The once dealared mr ten percent by the Western media, Zardari was just trying to play his cards with name changing of his children in particular that of Bilawal. Its about time that 116 million inhabitants in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan give up choosing the Bhuttos,the Chaudhris and the Mians in the elections. Just look around,the worldhad gone too far and we were still struggling in the middle.

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