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Terrorism: The Threat to Asia
Political Parties Conference Bangkok
November 22- 24, 2002

Dear Delegates:
It is a special privilege for me represent the Pakistan Peoples Party on
this, the second Asian Political Parties Conference. I thank the Thai Rak
Party and its leader the Prime Minister, for giving us this opportunity to
share views and shape the future of our continent.
I thank Speaker Jose De Venecia for his efforts to promote Asian unity
and thought of action by bringing us to gather.
We meet in Thailand at a time of tension, turmoil and terrorism.
Terrorism has struck repeatedly over the last month across different parts
of Asia, from Indonesia to Kuwait.
The era of peace for which we prayed, became a time of war.
Tolerance was replaced by terrorism.
Democracy in Pakistan was replaced by dictatorship.
The reality of suicide bombings has struck my homeland -- Christian
churches, Muslim mosques urban hotels, diplomatic missions are all
targets. Scores were murdered. The fanatics struck innocents in Bali.
They struck against the French in Yemen. They killed Americans in Kuwait.
A military dictatorship in Pakistan failed to stop Al-Qaeda and its
Taliban sympathizers from escaping during the bombing of Tora Bora.
Ladies and gentlemen:
The bombing of the World Trade Towers killed people of all races,
ethnicities and religions.
It killed Muslims, Christians, Hindus and Jews who were working together
building worldwide trade communication and cooperation.
The biggest challenge before the countries of Asia, indeed the countries
of the world is to overcome the forces of terrorism that spread hate,
religious intolerance, conflict and bloodshed.
At this time of continuing crisis, the Asian people need to understand
those who use violence in the name of Islam.
They are not clerics. They are criminals.
Their actions contradict to the teachings of Islam. Islam is committed to
tolerance and equality, and it is committed to the principles of
democracy. It is ironic that despite the strong commitment to democracy,
most Muslims are living in dictatorships. The Muslim people want freedom,
They want modernity diversity and democracy. They want the right to
debate, discuss and dissent.
Muslim women want to stop their discrimination.
The businessmen and women dream of competing freely without the barriers
of corruption and cronyism.
Our need is for judges who are not bribed or intimidated; of political
parties that are not decimated through state sponsored factionalism.
Of political leaders who are not political prisoners or exiles.
This is the exact opposite of the fanatical and ignorant message spread by
the Taliban and their allies in hate.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
The twenty-first century began with hope of a golden era of human dignity
and fundamental rights. But September 11 ended one period in time and
heralded the birth of another.
Asia became the new theatre of war. The war in Afghanistan. The threat of
war in Baghdad. The violence in the Middle-East. The tension in the South
Asia.
Muslims in Asia, and across the world, suffer because of Al-Qaeda and its
war against the west.
During the Afghan-Soviet war, Pakistan became the breeding ground for
their religious manipulation and exploitation.
My government restored law and order to our cities under assault from
terrorist attack. We restored the writ of government. We stopped Pakistan
from being declared as terrorist state. We rescued it from bankruptcy and
collapse.
So they organized and financed schemes to topple my government. They
destabilized democracy in Pakistan.
Ladies and gentlemen, these fanatics greatest fear is the democracy,
diversity and modernization.
It was in the clusters of democracy and equality that I devoted my
attention as Prime Minister of Pakistan.
My government modernized Pakistan introducing optic fiber communications,
cellular telephones, satellite dishes, Internet and computer literacy
programmes.
Pakistan integrated into the global economy that the fanatics fear. We
became one of the ten emerging capital markets of the world, attracting
billions of dollars in foreign investment, particularly in power
generation.
It was a transformation that was bringing Pakistan into the modern era as
a model of what moderate, enlightened Islam could accomplish for its
people.
To Islam at the crossroads, a democratic Pakistan was one fork in the
road, dictatorship the other.
With the eclipse of democracy in Pakistan in 1996 the Taliban seized
Kabul. They invited in Al-Qaeda allowing it to raise, recruit and train
disaffected Muslim Youth from across Asia. Two years after my overthrow ,
Bin Laden declared war on the west.
I am afraid, ladies and gentlemen, that the consequences of that
elimination of democracy in Pakistan continues to ripple across Asia.
Ladies and gentlemen,
Osama Bin Ladin did not emerge suddenly. His movement was long in the
making, and there is responsibility that must never be allowed to happen
again.
In our zeal to defeat the Soviets, we failed to work for a post-war
Afghanistan built on the democratic principles of coalition, consensus and
compromise.
The fundamental mistake was that we were not consistently committed to the
values of freedom, democracy and self-determination that undermine the
basis tenets of terrorism. We must not repeat that mistake again.
Democracy and
human rights must be the centerpiece of Asian policy at home and abroad.
Just as democracies do not make war against other democracies, democracies
also do not sponsor terrorism.
Those of us who are committed to human rights and democracy abhor
terrorism in all of its murderous forms. At this time of political crisis
in the world, I urge the Asian political parties to stand for the values
and principles of freedom and the rule of law.
The October elections in Pakistan were a mockery of justice. The leaders
of Pakistan’s major political parties were banned from contesting.
Significantly Mullah Omar’s teacher was allowed to contest and enter
Parliament.
The Pakistan Human Rights Commission confirmed allegations of rigging.
The European Union called the elections flawed. The Commonwealth refused
to re-admit Pakistan amidst its members.
The White House called this period a transition to civilian rule. The
transition must give away soon to full democracy. It must give way to a
full transfer of power from the military to the political parties to
prevent a resurgence of militancy extremism terrorism and suicide
bombings.
Muslim youth in Asia must be motivated to live, rather than kill and be
killed.
The rigged elections in Pakistan made the religions parties contenders
for power for the first time in Pakistan’s history. Since the elections
were rigged, I ask myself: why did the Generals permit the religious
parties to sweep the Pakistani areas bordering Afghanistan?
Perhaps the Generals wanted to tell the world that the choice in Pakistan
is a choice between military dictatorship and religious constraint.
But there is a third choice: the choice that the people want, the choice
that a transparent election can give them: the choice of democracy and
development.
Dictatorship doesn’t constrain extremism, it provokes it. Building a
moderate, stable and democratic Afghanistan would have marginalized the
Taliban and the Osamas of this world before they embroiled parts of Asia
in a new struggle shaped by the use of terror.
Building a moderate, stable and democratic Pakistan can save South Asia
from conflict, bloodshed, extremism, misery and despair.
The military regime’s October electoral farce must not be allowed to
stand.
A democratic Pakistan is the world’s best guarantee of the triumph of
moderation and modernity amongst the Muslims of Asia who stand at the
crossroads of our history.
Events over the last several months in Delhi, Islamabad and Sprinagar
underscore the danger.
Ladies and Gentlemen:
Kashmir is long considered by the CIA as the most likely place for a
nuclear confrontation.
Since the overthrow of my government, India and Pakistan thrice came
close to war.
A military regime was the cinder block to the expansion of extremism in
Afghanistan and to a possible nuclear conflict in South Asia.
As I noted before, democracies don’t go to war against other democracies
and democracies don’t allow terrorists to operate on their soil. The best
and only control for the excesses of extremism, is accountability to the
people.
Ladies and Gentlemen:
In the dawn of this young century, we Asians fight against terrorism. We
fight against dictatorship and intolerance that will confine and constrain
and victimize in the generations ahead.
These are difficult times. Freedom is under assault. Democracy is under
assault. Poverty, hunger and unemployment increases as terrorism hurts
markets. Asian people suffer.
The solutions will not be quick or simple. But Asia shall overcome the
obstacles to triumph.
As an Asian leader in the twenty first century the greatest challenge I
see is to overcome terrorism. Asians need peace, freedom and free markets
to fight poverty, hunger, unemployment and conflict.
A brighter future is anchored in peace, in freedom, in equal opportunity
and in breaking the chains of fascism and dictatorship.
These were the values our forefathers fought for in confronting
colonialism.
There are the values that can sustain and strengthen us in this new
century.
At this historic Asia conference, I urge all Asian political parties to
stand by the values of peace, of freedom and of equal opportunity.
Thank you ladies and gentlemen.
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