Ladies and Gentlemen:
The world is a very different place from what
we dreamed in those wonderful moments when the Berlin Wall fell and the
Cold war ended.
The era of peace for which we prayed, became a
time of war.
Civility was replaced with brutality.
Tolerance was replaced by terrorism.
Democracy in Pakistan was replaced by
dictatorship.
Violent fanaticism replaced religious
moderation.
The execution of Wall Street Journal Bureau
Chief Daniel Pearl in Pakistan underscored the treacherous nature of this
terrorist war. The reality of suicide bombings has struck our
homeland—Christian churches, urban hotels; foreign diplomatic missions are
all targets. And now the allied presence in Iraq adds a new factor to the
politics of the Middle East.
Ladies and Gentlemen:
It grieves me that included in the list of
victims of the World Trade Tower Bombings is the image of Islam across the
world. Our religion is not what these people preach. Islam is
committed to tolerance and equality, and it is committed to the principles
of democracy.
Despite the strong commitment to democracy,
most Muslims today are living in dictatorships. The Muslim people want
freedom just as the people of the Communist world wanted freedom.
Islam was the first religion to emancipate
women.
Yet a vast majority of Muslim women are
discriminated against in different aspects of their lives.
Islam asked us to read, to seek knowledge and
develop rational thought.
Yet I see a vast majority of Muslim students
denied knowledge, denied literacy, denied access to centers of excellence.
Islam is a religion born in the heart of the
trading world in the sixth century. The Holy Prophet (Peace Be Upon Him)
worked for and married Bibi Khadija who was a business woman.
Yet Muslim societies often rely on patronage,
nepotism and lack of transparency in business, which suffocates the
entrepreneurial skills of our people.
Islam is a message of Adl and Insaf. But Adl and Insaf are sacrificed at the alter
of lust for power.
Islam is about human dignity.
But we see Muslims suffer indignities because
dictatorship divides us and suppresses our own people.
Islam is a religion which declares the
equality of all men and women. We see this equality trampled as political
leaders are exiled or imprisoned. Muslim societies are facing a challenge.
Those who want to see Muslims suppressed and
oppressed support dictatorship and one party rule. They want to see the
future in the chains of the powers of ignorance, intolerance and
dictatorship.
Today there is anger in the Muslim world.
Muslims are dying in Kashmir, in Chechnya, in Palestine and other parts of
the world. I want you to turn anger into motivation. I
want you to fight for freedom, for democracy, for human rights so that
Muslims can hold up their heads with honour and dignity.
The Youth of today know that Islam emphasizes
the principles of consultation known as shura, consensus known as ijma and
independent judgment known as ijtihaad.
The Holy Koran makes it clear that the
workings of the democratic process—consultation between the government and
the people through elected representatives and accountability of leaders
to the people they serve through fair elections are at the heart of Islam.
Those who preach dictatorship, one party rule,
rig elections, blackmail politicians, pressure judges benefit themselves
by grabbing commercial, agricultural and residential plots undermine
Muslim societies and darken the future of the Muslim youth. They are the
enemies of humanity. While enriching themselves they impoverish the
working classes the middle classes, the farmers and the labourers.
In the end, they will be defeated.
Whosoever indulges in cruelty gets a befitting
response. Ayub Khan was thrown out by his subordinate. Yahya Khan was
thrown out by his subordinate. Both President Ishaq and Prime Minister
Nawaz had to go due to their subordinate in 1993. Farooq Leghari was also
thrown out by the Prime Minister he had brought to power.
When people are unhappy and disgruntled, it
acts as a catalyst to bring change. The cruelest of dictators go and this
dictatorship will go too.
Ladies and Gentlemen:
September 11 will go down in history as a
defining moment in our civilization. The attack on the World Trade Towers
was a second Pearl Harbor that ended one period in time and heralded the
beginning of another.
On that fateful day, the world tumbled out of
a time when Communism was the threat, the fear, the bloc that was to be
contained. The world tumbled into a different period when Islam and the
Muslim Nations seemingly replaced Communism as the new threat, the new
fear and the new world that was to be contained.
Since the world shook with the shock of the
attack on the World Trade Centers, much has changed. Civil liberties
suffered a set back. Many Muslims in the West live in fear of prejudice
suspicion and discrimination. They face hate crimes. It is difficult to
get student visas and even tourist visas. Moreover, now people can be
arrested and kept with out trial for long periods.
The World Trade Center attacks have shaken the
Muslim world. Since that fateful day, both Afghanistan and Iraq have
foreign troops on their soil. There is speculation on which Muslim country
will be next for regime changes.
The Muslim world is in an inertia. A hyper
power invincible. It need not be so.
A greater understanding is needed between the
Muslim world and the West. Politics does not know a vacuum and the
political pendulum swings from side to side.
America, British and Europe are open
societies. Muslims need to come out of the inertia and use the open-ness
of the democratic systems to build a world of greater understanding.
To do so, we need to be democrats. We need to
shun sectarianism, terrorism, ethnic violence and political prejudice.
And we can do it if we follow the path of
Quad-e-Azam and Quad-e-Awam. These great leaders of our nation taught us
the politics of Federalism, Democracy, Constitutional protection, rule of
law, equality and emancipation of the people from backwardness and
poverty.
The youth of today, better educated, better
equipped with computer technology at its fingertips is best placed to
reject dictatorship and fight for democracy to save Pakistan and our
coming generations from fratricide, civil war, violence, bomb blasts and
suicide bombing.
It is shocking that worshipers in Quetta were
killed in a mosque. Young Police officers in training were killed. The
foreign Minister says militants are non state actors out of state control.
If militants groups are out of control, it
reflects poorly on a military ruler with an army to command.
The writ of the state can be restored.
The PPP Government ended the Army operation in
Karachi. It restored law and order across the country. It closed the
Islamic University in Peshawar to prevent Al-Qaeda Politics from undering
internal security. It cracked down on sectarianism in the Punjab.
I may be a lady but there was security for
ordinary citizens when PPP was in government. Now a military leader with
full force can not control the situation.
Democracy and Development go hand in hand.
The records of the PPP government prove this.
PPP government was overthrown because PPP
government is a symbol of a strong, stable secure Pakistan which also
happens to be a nuclear power. Tin pot military dictators preside over
weak and dependent states because dictatorship kills the soul of a Nation.
When I was Prime Minister, the PPP heralded
the information age by introducing fax machines, digital pagers, optic
fiber communications, cellular telephones, satellite dishes, computers,
Internet, e-mail and even CNN and Fox into Pakistan. Before that Pakistan
had to wait 20 years to get a telephone connection.
Under the PPP government Pakistan integrated
into the global economy providing jobs for its youth. 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
dramatically reduced infant mortality. We increased literacy by
one-third. We built over 48,000 primary and secondary schools in two terms
targeting rural Pakistan.
Women’s Bank.
The World Bank called our energy program a
model to the entire developing world.
WHO gold medal.
It was a remarkable transformation of a
society. It was a transformation that our underprivileged wanted.
It was a transformation that attacked
ignorance and illiteracy and injustice. It was a transformation that was
bringing Pakistan into the modern era as a model to more than one billion
Muslims around the world of what moderate, enlightened Islam could
accomplish for its people.
And thus to the fanatics and the extremists,
we became the enemy, the threat, and the obstacle. To at the crossroads,
a democratic Pakistan was one fork in the road, dictatorship the other.
With the eclipse of my government, the
Taliban seized Kabul and imposed their will across Afghanistan. They
invited in Al-Qaeda declared war on America and the rest is history.
If the PPP government had remained in Power,
no-one would have died in World Trade Center attacks, in the retaliatory
war against Afghanistan. Nor would the definition of terrorism have
changed to the detriment of the Palestinians. People of Iraq could have
avoided war as the issue of weapons of mass destructions would be viewed
against a different background.
These dramatic changes happened because the
PPP government was dismissed bringing tragic repercussions in its wake.
On the India front, PPP signed the only
nuclear confidence building treaty between our nations, the agreement not
to attack each other’s respective nuclear facilities. We established
military contact between the Pakistani and Indian leadership modeled after
the hot line between Washington and Moscow during the Cold War. We opened
our borders to travel and tourism, and adopted a South Asian preferential
tariff agreement that established a free-trade zone between Pakistan,
India and the other nations of the region.
With the dismissal of the PPP government, the
ill concurred Kargil operation took place. Islamabad was humiliated into
unilaterally withdrawing. Soldiers were abandoned to icy deaths. 3000 were
secretly buried.
In 2001 an attack took place on the Indian
parliament. Again Islamabad was humiliated into banning the militant
groups under orders from Washington and New Delhi for better it would have
been to have the political wisdom to rein in militants before advise
consequences fell on the country.
As if this was not enough, Islamabad was
accused of exporting nuclear technology to North Korea in violation of
solemn commitments. And while the Palestinian Authority lay under
occupation, with homes bulldozed, with Jerusalem unsettled and Golan
Heights occupied, the dictator offered to unilaterally recognize Israel.
He failed to even tie up the recognition issue with the OIC resolutions or
the Saudi Peace Initiative or to ask Israel to remain neutral on Kashmir.
When I traveled to New Delhi in November 2001
to develop better relations between our countries, I was denounced by the
military establishment. Two years later they are openly declaring their
commitment to the PPP vision of peace. Leadership is about vision. There
is a timing in politics. Those who realise the lesson too late fail to
reap the harvest for peace or for our people.
Ladies and Gentlemen:
General Musharraf created a hung Parliament.
He marginalised the democratic parties. He wants the people of Pakistan,
people all over the world, to choose between military dictatorship or
religious rule. There is a third choice: Democratic Governance. But the
dictator refused to give them that choice.
Let us remember that building a moderate,
stable and democratic political structure in Afghanistan and Iraq could
have saved the Afghans and the Iraqis from a devastating war, from death,
destruction and devastation.
General Musharraf first staged an
unconstitutional referendum to rubber-stamp his dictatorship. The New York
Times called it a dubious exercise. There was a five percent turnout, no
voting lists, no fixed polling stations, pictures of eight year olds
voting.
He followed it up with an election that the
European Union called “a deeply flawed exercise”. Human Rights Watch said
“the deck was stacked against the democratic parties”.
He passed 29 constitutional amendments in 2
minutes. It took America 250 years to pass 27 amendments. General
Musharraf distrusts democracy. He fears the outcome of a free expression
of democracy. He refuses to let me return home in safety.
He is a soldier who fears a woman.
He is a General afraid to face a woman leading
her Party.
I wonder what the great General is frightened
off?
He is frightened because he knows this unarmed
lady has the moral strength of ideas and the support of the Pakistani
people.
For 7 years my Party, my family and I were
tortured to force me to quit politics. By the Grace of God the people
stood by me and I stood by them. To fight for truth and justice is a holy
duty for us to save our Nation from the clutches of military dictatorship
and oppression.
History has taught us the very hard lesson
that when Pakistan turns against democracy, it turns against itself. In
1965, under one military dictatorship we signed the Tashkent Declaration.
In 1971 we lost half the country. In 1981 we lost Siachen. In 2001, we
lost Strategic depth in Afghanistan. That is why it is critical that
Pakistan keeps sight of its democratic values.
Islamabad’s Generals are betting that the
White House needs them for the war on terror and the Iraq situation and
will backburner the cause of democracy. Maybe they are right. But if
Islamabad’s military dictatorship is allowed to exploit America’s
strategic interests to legitimize its own illegitimate power, the threat
to Pakistan from hostile neighbors, militant groups, suicide bombings can
only increase. And we know from the example of Yugoslavia, what happens to
countries that internally implode.
Therefore I appeal to the youth of Pakistan to
come forward and unite for the restoration of democracy and constitutional
rule.
I have great faith in the youth of Pakistan. I
know the youth will redeem my faith in them.
You, the Youth, are our successor generation.
To you we pass the torch of leadership, our democratic vision baptized in
the sacred blood of our Martyrs.
Dear students, Dear youth, fight what you
believe in. Fight for Democracy. Fight for our exploited and impoverished
people.
Remember: it is better to live like a lion for
one day -- than live like a jackal for a thousand years.
I wish you all success and happiness, my dear
daughters and sons of Pakistan.