BENAZIR BHUTTO last night
demanded that General Pervez Musharraf step down and
insisted that any hope of an understanding with him was
now “finished”.
“By suspending the
constitution and declaring a state of emergency he
reneged on his promises to us,” Pakistan’s former prime
minister declared. “Any understanding between us is now
finished.”
In a late night telephone
interview with The Sunday Times, Bhutto sounded tired
but elated after what she described as “another long
day”. She spoke of her outrage at Musharraf’s acts of
the past week that have plunged the country into crisis.
“I feel absolutely shocked
that we have these year-long negotiations and we agree
to work together, then he turns around and suspends the
constitution,” she said. “I have to wonder if he was
ever serious.
“It wasn’t as if he had no alternative. Why did he do
this when he could have carried on with the road map
toward democracy agreed with the country’s biggest
political party?”
His actions, Bhutto said, had forced her to call people
out into the streets, something she had been eager to
avoid for fear of bloodshed. It was to prevent this, she
said, that she had agreed the deal which saw him
dropping corruption charges against her, enabling her to
return home last month after 8Å years in exile.
“Now he’s left us no choice but to call out the people,”
she said. “I face a difficult predicament. I’ve long
been worried about creeping Talibanisation in Pakistan
and if I don’t take the lead then there may well be
extremist elements that take advantage. So I have no
choice.”
Bhutto insisted that the
only way to avoid violence is for Musharraf to step
down. “He’s put himself into a corner and it’s of his
own making,” she said.
“His two trump cards were
the international community and the army. Now he’s
losing both. The only option he has is to step aside and
hand power to an interim government of national
consensus that will oversee elections. His time is up.”
On Friday, under
international pressure, Musharraf announced that he
would hold elections by February 15. Yesterday Malik
Mohammed Qayyum, the attorney-general, told reporters
that the state of emergency would “end within one
month”. But Bhutto dismissed these assurances. “It would
be impossible to have elections in these circumstances
where both the courts and the election commission are in
his control,” she said.
Musharraf's declaration of
what amounted to martial law, arresting thousands,
locking up judges and taking television stations off the
air, has seen Bhutto transformed from someone doing a
deal with a dictator into a woman — and mother —
prepared to sacrifice everything for democracy.
She vowed to go ahead with
the three-day Long March planned for this week from
Lahore to Islamabad, despite further warnings of
assassination attempts such as the suicide bombs that
killed 140 people during her return to Karachi three
weeks ago. The march will bring her into all-out
confrontation with the regime.
“I know there are risks for
my personal safety but I have to look at the bigger
picture,” she said.
“Pakistan is facing the
threat of disintegration. One by one the tribal areas
have fallen to [the] Taliban and now they are advancing
further into the northwest frontier. With an
unrepresentative government and an army that is
leaderless and rudderless, Pakistan is facing its most
serious threat since 1971 [when the country split into
two].”
However, the government
insisted that the march would be blocked. “All marches,
processions and political gatherings are banned at the
moment, so I’m afraid the march has been outlawed,” said
Tariq Azim, the information minister who was once an
ally of Bhutto.
“We are committed to
upholding the law and it must be applied equally for
everyone, including Benazir Bhutto.”
Bhutto said she would not be deterred. “Even if they
block it, it’s like a strike call because it paralyses
the whole area. Either way they lose and we win. If they
don’t interrupt it we show the numbers we can get out.
If they do bring out all those police and teargassing,
it still brings everything to a standstill and shows the
numbers we would have had.”
Bhutto was speaking from her
home in Islamabad after spending the day building up
pressure on Musharraf with a series of high-profile
visits around the Pakistani capital, constantly trailed
by the microphones and lenses of the international
media.
First she met
non-governmental organisations and local journalists
banned from reporting current events and protesting
against new laws which impose jail sentences on anyone
who criticises Musharraf. She also kept up international
pressure on the government by holding a meeting with
diplomats last night.
For the most part Bhutto
seemed able to move unimpeded. The freedom of movement
she is enjoying, while authorities admit that they have
arrested more than 3,000 people, had prompted
speculation that she might still be in negotiations with
Musharraf.
However, Bhutto insisted
that there is no contact between the two sides and that
it is because of her high international profile that
Musharraf has not arrested her. “The international
interest in Pakistan is giving me more security,
although at the same time it’s made me a bigger target
for assassins,” she said.
It is increasingly hard to
see a way out for Musharraf. Bhutto’s call for millions
to join the march has alarmed senior military officers.
It is widely believed that General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani,
Musharraf's deputy chief of army staff, is unhappy about
the emergency. He is being touted as the man to topple
Musharraf and hand the government back to civilian
politicians.
“Musharraf is making one bad
decision after another,” said Bhutto. “First there were
the peace agreements with the Taliban in the tribal
areas, then the dismissal of the chief justice . . . now
all this is coming home to roost. The only answer is for
him to move aside.”
The last time Bhutto
announced a Long March — in 1993, against the government
of Nawaz Sharif and Ghulam Ishaq Khan, then president —
she never needed to take a step. The night before the
march, Khan resigned and called elections.
“That would be nice,” she
said last night.