Shaheed Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto was
only 24 when she had returned to Pakistan in June of 1977 after
completing her studies at Harvard and Oxford, possibly with her
sights on a career as diplomat. But just two weeks after her
return, history took a wild turn when her father – Shaheed
Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto – was ousted as prime minister, imprisoned in
a military coup by General Zia and martial law declared. General
Zia, capitalizing on public protests of the disputed parliamentary
elections, found it an opportune moment to grab the power, which
he did in the early hours of 5th of July 1977. As it is
established as a fact already, he later conspired to execute him
by framing him in a false conspiracy-to-murder charge. For Saheed
Mohtarma, this was the greatest trauma beyond her imaginations.
Nonetheless, brave & bold as she was, she tried to stay composed
and took over the reigns of her father’s Pakistan Peoples Party
(PPP) along with her mother - Begum Nusrat Bhutto. In the
meanwhile, she also struggled to gather supports from her party
loyalists and other political forces in the country to force Zia
to drop fallacious murder charges against her father and call
elections as promised. As a result, she then had to spend eighteen
months of her bashful youth in and out of house arrest and
political captivity. However, all these years she stayed peaceful
and never resorted to violence of any sort; in fact on several
occasions violence was done upon her and her mother, instead.
Two years later on 04 April 1979 her
beloved father - a great leader of the Pakistani people - was
executed in what is now called a well-conspired judicial murder.
This was a defining moment in Mohtarma’s life as she suddenly
found herself in the mantle of her great father. And, as she later
wrote in her memoir Daughter of the East, “I told him on my oath
in his death cell, I would carry on his work.” She also wrote in
the same book, “I didn’t choose this life; it chose me.”
Fast forward, Shaheed Mohtarma
intensified her denunciations and began to mobilize her party
loyalists for a political movement against General Zia. After
repeated stints of house arrest, she was finally imprisoned under
solitary confinement in a desert cell of Sukkur during the summer
of 1981. Shaheed Mohtarma in her memoir “Daughter of the East” has
narrated her days and nights in that infamous Sukkur jail and I
quote, “The summer heat turned my cell into an oven. My skin split
and peeled, coming off my hands in sheets. Boils erupted on my
face. My hair, which had always been thick, began to come out by
the handful. Insects crept into the cell like the invading armies.
I tried pulling the sheet over my head at night to hide from their
bites, pushing it back when it got too hot to breathe.” This was
the cruel treatment meted out by a brute dictator to a young woman
who was only out there on a peaceful struggle to restore democracy
in the country. These pains from the jail term were nothing as
compared to what was in store for her later. The greatest ones
came from her shaheed father’s old associates – the so-called
uncles. The sight of seeing most of them turning away from her and
in fact joining hands with her father’s enemies, at the time when
she needed them most, was extremely painful thing to endure.
However despites all odds stacked against her, she stood peaceful
at this juncture too.
Fast-forward once more, and the year
is 1986. Shaheed Mohtarma made a triumphant return on 10 April
1986 in Lahore and began her peaceful movement challenging the
military rule to restore democracy. Finally, Zia died on 18 Aug
1988 in a mysterious air crash. But during more than eleven years
of his autocratic rule, he did all in his capacity to destroy both
Benazir and her party. However, salute to her and her loyalists in
the party that Zia left without accomplishing his dream-project of
PPP-demolition. Then came the post-Zia 1988 elections. Mohtarma’s
PPP was pitted against the Zia-protégés who had ganged up against
her and were engaged in all sorts of malicious mud slinging
campaigns against her person never seen in Pakistan before.
Nevertheless, she remained focused and peaceful at this difficult
time as well. Although her party had won the elections by securing
the majority seats in the parliament, president Ghulam Ishaq Khan
– representing the military establishment – tried to provoke her
by delaying hand over of power to her. At that time too she
demonstrated great leadership and kept the party cadre entirely
peaceful. She was finally sworn in as the youngest and the first
Muslim woman prime minister at the age of 35 on 02 Dec 1988.
During her short stint as a prime minister (02 Dec-88 thru 06
Aug-90) she was made to do lot of compromise s with the military
that included retaining some of their choice-ministers to key
cabinet posts. However, despite all these bitter memories from the
excesses meted out to her and her family in the past, she never
went for witch-hunting against any one. On 06 Aug 1990, her
government was dismissed on trumped up charges of corruption that
saw arrest of her husband Asif Ali Zardari also. This was the
beginning of yet another phase of a difficult time in her life but
she remained peaceful.
Even so, she continued the fight and
PPP returned to power with her as the prime minister for the
second time on 19 Oct 1993. This time too the conspirators
continued their handy work against her and she was dismissed for
the second time on 05 Nov 1996. Benazir was heart-broken as this
time it was her own appointed president Farooq Laghari – a party
leader groomed by her shaheed father – who reportedly worked with
the military to stab her in the back. The awful part was that it
had followed the gruesome murder of her brother Murtaza Bhutto in
Karachi, which was also believed to be a handy work of some hidden
forces. These two successive tragic events had broken her back and
she was in severe depression from them for days together. The
painful backstabbing from her party-man Farooq Laghari did not end
there. As revealed by Mohtarma in her interview with Karan Thapar
(CNN program Devil’s Advocate) Farooq Laghari, at the behest of
some from the military, had instituted false corruption cases
against her and her husband. It is also said that the then prime
minister Nawaz Sharif and his henchman Saif Ur Rehman were in
complicity with the same. The fact of the matter is that she
suffered a lot from these cases. With her husband in jail, a sick
mother and small children to look after, relentless witch-hunt &
harassment from the establishment had made life rather very
difficult for her. And with continued persecution, she was left
with no choice but to go into self-exile in 1999. She has
described her days and nights in exile in Dubai-London as the most
difficult time in her life. Nevertheless, she stayed peaceful all
these years and despite all odds stacked against her, she
continued, in utter disbelief for many, to effectively govern her
party from outside. Besides that, she also continued to fight
corruption charges and travel to world capitals promoting her
vision of democracy and pluralism in Pakistan. All of these
continued to frustrate her enemies and opponents especially
General Musharraf and his cronies. Then came her role as a
reconciliatory leader. With utter surprise & chagrin for many, she
sat down with her erstwhile adversary – Nawaz Sharif – to work on
a “Charter of Democracy” and sign the same in London on 15 May
2006 with a pledge to set aside their differences and work for
restoration of civilian rule in Pakistan. Not only that, she also
kept reconciliation doors open for Musharraf with larger national
interest in mind. Mohtarma was able to convince Musharraf to
commit to a road map of peace and broader national reconciliation.
By sitting down first with her arch adversary Nawaz Sharif and
later with her sworn enemy Musharraf, Mohtarma was aptly able to
demonstrate to all that she was indeed a woman of peace and
reconciliation. In her last memoir, “Reconciliation: Islam,
Democracy and the West", she has talked at length about the need
for reconciliation between Islam and the West. She has suggested
creation of a Reconciliation Corps (modeled on the Peace Corps) to
restore communication, trust, and dialogue between the Muslim
world and the West. She said this proposed Reconciliation Corps
would be made up of Muslims from western societies who have been
economically, socially, and politically integrated into the life
of their host countries while maintaining their Islamic character,
culture, and religion. She also added, these Muslim youths could
build bridges with their countries of origin.
Finally, in the closing lines of her
book per se, she has opined and I quote, “ It is time for new
ideas. It is time for creativity. It is time for bold commitment.
And, it is time for honesty, both among people and between people.
This is what I have tried to do in these pages. There has been
enough pain. It is time for reconciliation.”
The author is a Riyadh-based
Columnist. Email:
faizalnajdi@gmail.com
Biography -
Speeches -
Articles/Interviews -
Kashmir Policy -
Letters -