Mr. President,
Mr. Vice President,
Members of the Foundation
Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen,
I am privileged to join
the 5th National Programme honouring late Shehu Yar’Adua—a
great patriot, nationalist and democrat.
Shehu meant different
things to different people.
To the President, he was a
trusted friend, a tested colleague.
To his people, a Martyr,
sacrificing his life for principles.
For Pakistan, a graduate
of its prestigious officer cadre trained at Quetta Staff College.
It was at the Quetta Staff
College that Martyr Shehu’s path indirectly crossed mine through my
father. Mr. Shehu met Prime Minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, whom he held in
admiration, at the Staff College in Quetta.
I was the Prime Minister
of Pakistan when President Abacha threatened Shehu’s life. I wrote asking
for clemency, hoping to save the life of a man who was his peoples hope. I
knew that the execution of a political leader breeds political turmoil.
Mr. President and
Distinguished Guests,
The clemency appeals fell
on deaf ears. The rest is a gory chapter in Nigeria’s history.
As I took pen in hand to
write against the execution of Nigeria’s great son, my thoughts turned to
Turkey. As Pakistan’s Foreign Minister my father had urged Turkey’s
military rulers to spare President Adnan Mendre’s life to save Turkey
from a blood stained history. But the General went ahead-- condemning
himself forever in the eyes of unborn generations.
So, too, in Pakistan when
military dictator General Ziaul Haq executed Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali
Bhutto. Pakistani society has still to recover from an assassination that
divided a nation and plunged it into turmoil.
Humanity condemns killers.
Thus victims join the celestial skies like stars burning bright inspiring
coming generations to the heights of heroism.
Shehu Yar’Adua was in
Pakistan during the tragic days following its disintegration in 1971.
His stay in Pakistan gave
him an insight into its history and its politics.
He realized the price paid
for a politicized military that undermined the human and political rights
of its own downtrodden people.
Pakistan’s founder
Muhammad Ali Jinnah warned against tribalism, ethnicity, parochialism,
sectarianism, religious bigotry and corruption. These are the ills that
haunt non democratic countries since the battle against colonialism was
won.
Mr Jinnah separated
interpretation of religion from the business of the state. His dream was
of a modern, democratic Pakistan built on the edifice of a Federalist
structure on the pattern of the United States of America. This echoed
Nigerian’s dream of becoming Africa’s “Showcase for Democracy”.
Distinguished Guests,
Pakistan’s Founder died
before his dream became reality. Military interventions followed his death
opening the floodgates of religious bigotry, sectarianism, ethnicity,
tribalism and corruption. Pakistan appeared on a never-ending roller
coaster ride between democracy and military dictatorship.
Political leaders were
targeted for character assassination. Murder, treason, crime were the lot
of popular leaders targeted for elimination.
The aim was to discredit
political leaders and the political process so that dictatorship could
replace democracy.
My father Prime Minister
Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto took politics out of the drawing rooms of the rich and
powerful into the huts of the poor. His Pakistan People’s Party empowered
the masses, ushering in socio-economic changes with far-reaching
consequences.
Reflecting reforms in
Africa, Asia and Latin America, he opposed the concentration of wealth and
power in the hands of cartels, tribal leaders, the mandarins of
bureaucracy and self styled religious leaders who exploited the people.
Distinguished Guests:
I learnt from my father
that democracy and development go together, that human dignity and social
emancipation go hand in hand.
The great Nigerian
intellectual Chinua Achebe in his book “The Trouble With Nigeria”
wrote: “On the morning after Murtala Muhammad seized power in July
1975 public servants were found “on seat” at seven-thirty in the morning.
Even the “go-slow” traffic that had… defied every regime vanished
overnight from the streets!”
Then he added:
“…alas, that
transformation was short-lived… in order to effect lasting change it must
be followed up with a … consistent agenda of reform...”
Distinguished Guests,
British Prime Minister Sir
Winston Churchill, amongst other great leaders, believed that
democracy—with all its faults —is the best system for human management.
Tellingly, the advanced
and powerful Nations of today are democracies.
Excellencies and
Distinguished Guests,
Pakistan is an example of
the tragic consequences of dictatorship. The use of the religious card by
military rulers produced sectarian strife. The divide between different
schools in Islam created fissures.
Doctrinal differences took
on a dangerous character during the military era of the eighties.
Arms flooded into the
country following Pakistan’s emergence as a ‘frontline’ state during the
Soviet occupation of Afghanistan.
Small arms and heroin
proliferated in Pakistani society.
Secondly, a number of
religious schools were established to recruit and train young man from the
Muslim world to fight the Soviet super-power in Afghanistan. No one dreamt
then that one day some of them would take on the other super-power. By
1997 there were 2,500 religious schools in the province of Punjab alone
(compared to 137 at independence).
A number of the religious
schools taught intolerance between sects and between religions. Products
of these schools were without skills relevant to the job market.
Trained to fight wars and
reject politics and elections, they looked for a messiah to give meaning
to their lives.
Osama Bin Laden, preaching
war against the Infidels, appealed to them.
They pegged their militant
skills to outstanding political disputes in the Muslim community creating
a network of militias that changed the world since the bombing of the
World Trade Centers on September 11, 2001.
Distinguished Guests,
In this the twenty-first
century, and the third millennium, pluralism and tolerance are threatened
by culture of violence that alters the way we live.
Fear replaces safety and
conflict replaces peace as the terrorist assault unfolds the contours of a
post bi-polar world.
Discord and violence have
become the order of the day.
In this grim scenario, the
future looks bleak, unless federalism and freedom are restored. These are
the twin pillars that can built a culture of tolerance, accommodation and
co-existence. Education with economic and political empowerment is the
vital way forward as we witness the rise of religious margins in the
Muslim, Jewish, Christian and Hindu civilizations.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
The Collapse of the Soviet
Union ended the Cold War bringing new dreams, hopes and aspirations of a
world peaceful and prosperous.
With a heavy heart I say
to you that
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The era of peace for which
we prayed, became a time of war.
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Tolerance was replaced by
terrorism.
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Dictatorship replaced
democracy in too many countries.
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Violent fanaticism
replaced religious moderation.
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As the war against
terrorism enters a new phase, I urge Non-Muslims to know those who use
violence and terror in the name of Islam.
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Their actions contradict
the teachings of Islam.
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Islam is committed to tolerance and equality, and it is
committed to the principles of democracy.
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The image of Muslim people
is hurting because too many Muslims are living in dictatorships. Muslims
are hurting because in many Muslim countries, contrary to Islam, women are
discriminated against in every aspect of life.
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We spend so much on armies
and weapons. We spend too little on our children who lack education.
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We run economies on
cronyism, nepotism, abuse of power and corruption killing the spirit of
entrepreneurship in our countries. Our businessmen and women find it hard
to freely compete.
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In many Muslim
countries, contrary to Islam, justice is dead. We live in societies where
judges are bribed or terrorised.
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Our human rights activists
are ignored.
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Our political parties are
targets of state sponsored terrorism.
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Popular political leaders
are persecuted living as prisoners or exiles.
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The voice of our people is
silenced through rigged elections.
The authoritarian powers
of the state are destroying the Muslim people and Muslim society.
Unless we break force of
these authoritarian powers, our future is in the chains of ignorance,
intolerance and dictatorship.
The religious parties call
for religious dictatorship to replace existing authoritarian governments .
They ignore the key concepts in Islam which develop democracy. These
include the principles of consultation or shura, consensus
known or ijma and independent judgment or ijtihaad.
Ironically Islam brought
democracy to the world long before any western country. Yet today
democracy is the progative of the West.
Professor Samuel
Huntington of Harvard University predicted a clash of civilization
between the West and the Islamic world.
Ladies and Gentlemen:
This clash threatens to
eclipse our future unless we avert it.
Islam is part of the
Judeo-Christian heritage. We are all ahle Kitaab or People of the Book.
The Prophet Abraham is our father. Moses and Jesus are our prophets. We
are united in a consensus of monotheism.
The word “Muslim” actually
includes the followers of the Prophets Moses, Jesus and Mohammad (Peace be
Upon Him).
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Suddenly Muslim countries
are caught in the eye of the storm. It seems the world has tumbled out of
a time when Communism was the threat, the fear, and the bloc that was to
be contained. Now Islam and the Muslim Nations could replace Communism as
the new threat, the new fear and the new world that is to be contained.
Much was written of how
the World Trade Centre impacted on the West. Little stock was taken of how
it shook the Muslim world.
Ordinary Muslims live in
fear of another terrorist attack on the West and the repurcussions it
could bring for Muslim people and Muslim countries.
After the victims of the
World Trade Center and their families, Muslims are the most victimized
community. This is why many Muslims find it hard to believe that any
Muslim could be so myopic as to cause grievious harm to the Muslim
community through the senseless attack on the World Trade Centers.
Muslim political problems
are for the time being shelved. The ongoing violence in the Middle East,
the killing in Kashmir, the civil war in Chechnya are ignored by a world
unable to distinguish between Terrorism and Occupation.
In the face of the
awesome military and political power of the West, and the helplessness
most Muslims feel as bombs threaten to kill fellow Muslims, Osama and his
men could re-emerge to haunt the world community.
Defeated and disgraced
after the fall of Kabul, Al-Qaeda is now trying to peg their claim to fame
on the slogan that Islam and the Muslims face a new crusade. If their call
is heeded to, we could witness the dawn of a new asymmetrical battle that
stains the world stage with blood, violence, death and destruction.
The course of sanity, the
cause of world peaces lies in Democracy and Human Rights. It lies in
Justice and the Rule of Law. It lies in the emancipation of the people of
the Third World from poverty, exploitation and hunger.
Under the PPP government
Pakistan integrated into the global economy bringing prosperity to its
people.
We became one of the
ten emerging capital markets of the world, attracting billions of dollars
in foreign investment, particularly in power generation.
We eradicated polio
in our country. We reduced infant mortality. We increased literacy by
one-third building tens of thousands of primary and secondary schools.
We established a
Women’s Bank, run by women for women giving credit to women.
We brought down the
population growth rate even as we tripled the economic productivity rate.
We outlawed domestic
violence by establishing special women’s police even as we doubled
national revenues.
It was a remarkable
transformation of a society. It was a transformation that our
underprivileged wanted.
It was a transformation
that demonstrated the strength of a Muslim society based on Democracy and
Human Dignity.
It was a transformation
that was bringing Pakistan into the modern era as a model to one billion
Muslims of what moderate, enlightened Islam could achieve for its people.
And thus to the terrorists
and their sympathizers, we became the enemy that was to be destroyed. We
threatened the rise of the Taliban state in Afghanistan without which Al
Qaeda could not operate. And so democracy in Pakistan was killed.
To kill democracy in
Pakistan, the Prime Minister’s brother was shot outside their childhood
home.
With the eclipse of the
democratic government, the Taliban seized Kabul and invited in Al- Qaeda.
Without the check of good advice from neighbourly Pakistan, Osama Bin
Laden declared war on America in 1998.
Three years later, the
mighty towers of the World Trade Center collapsed as suicide bombers flew
Boeing jets into them. The world changed dramatically after what can only
be described as a second Pearl Harbour. A Pearl Harbour that bombed the
inter cultural, inter religious harmony so essential to prevent the Clash
of Civilizations.
Without modernization and
moderation, it is challenging for Non-Muslims to distinguish between
religion and terrorism which Muslims understand by faith and instinct.
An historical mistake was
made following the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan in 1989.
As a world community, we failed to plan for a post-war Afghanistan built
on democratic principles of coalition, consensus and human rights.
Once the Soviets withdraw
from Afghanistan , tribalism, ethnicity and sectarianism came to the fore.
As tribalism, ethnicity and sectarianism rose, the hopes of a democratic
order built on a broad based government of consensus collapsed.
Now, in the shadow of
Kabul, Islamabad’s military rulers are making the same mistake as the
Afghans did. Last October’s elections were a mockery of justice and fair
play. The leaders of Pakistan’s major political parties were banned from
contesting and campaigning. After the polling closed, the results were
stopped for hours and days. Turnout, estimated at 20%, doubled, tripled
and in some cases exceeded 100%.
Rigged elections can give
the label of democracy but they are unable to give the strength of
democracy, a strength that comes from a consensus forged by public
opinion.
Now the religious parties
control the states bordering Afghanistan. Next they might control more of
Pakistan. Islam’s second largest Muslim country, Pakistan, is today
threatened with a religious uprising in the absence of democracy.
Dictatorship doesn’t
modernize Nations. Dictatorship creates extremists. A democratic political
structure in Afghanistan could have marginalized the Taliban and Al-Qaeda
before they declared war on the West. It is democracy and democracy alone
that can create modern, moderate and tolerant Muslim societies that can
co-exist in peace and stability.
The greatest protection of
freedom from terrorists and conflicts is replacing dictatorships with
governments responsible to the people, governments based on the values of
tolerance and accommodation.
Shehu Yar Adua gave his
life so Nigerians could live in freedom. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto gave his life
so Pakistanis could live in freedom.
Legendary leaders gave
their lives, braving prison cells and death by hanging to keep alive for
their people, their continents and civilizations the dream of Freedom.
Shehu Yar Adua was one
such leader.
He lives in our hearts and
minds. His name glows in the golden pages of history as a leader who
beckoned his people to a brighter future than the darkness of Tyranny.
With his Martyrdom, the
torch has passed to the coming generation.
It is my hope and prayer
that we may live up to the glorious traditions of the men who died so
that we could live in dignity, democracy and opportunity.
Thank you, Mr. President,
Ladies and Gentlemen.