Speech at
Lady
Margaret Hall
by
Ms Benazir Bhutto
May 27, 2004

It is a pleasure and an honour for
me to return to Lady Margaret Hall. I thank the Principal, Mrs.
Frances Lannon, for the invitation and the opportunity to meet
with you this evening.
I was at Lady Margaret Hall in the seventies at the height of the
Miners strike. I return to Lady Margaret Hall in different times.
Now London prepares emergency evacuation plans in the event of a
terrorist strike in this the twenty first century.
The changes in threat perception and preparation are enormous.
I visit Oxford at a time when Coalition forces are seemingly
bogged down in a political and military quagmire that threatens
the achievement of its goals in Iraq.
With respect to the war on terrorism-I see three primary victims
of the Al Qaeda rampage of September 11th. Above all the victims
are the people who were killed that day.
The era of peace for which we prayed, became a time of war.
Violence continues in Iraq and Afghanistan. Terrorist acts
take place from Indonesia to Morocco. Even Madrid is not spared.
This violences takes place at a time when tension in the Middle
East make the peace process a distant dream. Despite some
overtures, India and Pakistan still have a distance to travel to
reduce the risk of nuclear confrontation.
Ladies and gentlemen, The attack on the Twin Towers
was an attack on a country that symbolises freedom.
As a former student from Oxford and Harvard, I first learned
of freedom in these bastions of democracy.
It was at Oxford, with its flourishing political groups and
debates at the Oxford Union that I learned of dissent, tolerance,
and equal opportunity for all citizens.
My commitment to freedom was nurtured here. Britain is the
world's oldest democracy. Its elected, representative and
empowered House of Commons as well as its Habeous Corpus Charter
is a light of hope for all those denied human dignity across the
world.
Wedded to the past, the terrorists attacked the symbols of a
modern age.
Ladies and gentlemen,
It grieves me that included in the list of innocent victims of
September 11th is the image of Islam across the world. For
me, Islam is not what these people preach.
I see Islam as committed to tolerance and equality and committed,
by Koranic definition, to the principles of democracy.
The Muslim people want freedom. I
know the people of Pakistan want freedom.
They can not understand the support for a military dictator.
Islam is committed to universal education and literacy. The
very first word of the Holy Book Koran is "Read."
Yet, while militaries are armed, students are often not educated.
Professors and teachers are paid very little salaries.
Islam is committed to the equality of women in society. The
wife of the Holy Prophet of Islam was a working woman.
Yet, in many Muslim countries, women are discriminated against in
every aspect of life. Most of these crimes go unpunished.
The investment in justice, law and order and prosecution is small.
Businessmen and women are not allowed to freely compete. Nepotism
and cronyism prevail parliamentarians pressured or forced to
defect.
Human rights activists are jailed.
Political parties are decimated.
Political leaders are political prisoners or forced into exile.
Dissent is not tolerated. Television interviews are regulated by
the military.
This is the street of decent Muslim people, terrorized by the
authoritarian powers of the state.
It is the street of Pakistan's future in the chains of tyranny
where law and constitution are treated with contempt.
And it is a street that threatens to explode.
We must fight a war on terrorism, and on political manipulation of
religion and against military dictatorship.
Terrorists and dictators are the cause of war, bloodshed,
inhumanity, chaos and disintegration.
In the end, they will be defeated.
Ladies and gentlemen,
In the Muslim Holy Book, Abraham is our father, just as Moses and
Jesus are our prophets.
There are similarities between Islam and the Judeo-Christian
traditions.
Muslims believe that Jews, Christians and Muslims are one people
who are Ahle e Kitaab that is who have religious books containing
the message sent by God through his Prophets.
Ladies and Gentlemen:
If Islam and the Muslim world are viewed as threats, we will enter
a relentless cycle of action and reaction spiralling out of
control. To prevent this, it is important to distinguish between
those committing crimes in the name of the Islamic religion and
those Muslims who believe in peaceful religious co-existence.
It would be a tragedy if suspicion towards Muslims led to a
backlash that provoked a clash of civilizations.
All Nineteen of the hijackers that hit the world trade center were
Arabs. That Arab countries could have produced men who launched
such an attack makes them the center of scrutiny in the
twenty-first century. There is renewed focus on the Arabs as a
whole. Nontheless, the war against terror has put the Middle East
issue on the backburner. This should not be so. A Middle East
settlement is one of the significant keys to the future Arab mind
and the Arab youth just as it is key to the mind of the Israelis
who today live under the shadow of the suicide bomber.
The Coalition forces in Baghdad, greeted with hope after the fall
of the Saddam dictatorship, are now facing the anger of the Iraqi
people. The lack of preparedness for the post Saddam era caused
the backlash. There is a need to widen the base of international
and internal participation in Iraq.
Iraq and the Middle East are brimming with violence. They are the
flash points that Osama and his cohorts exploit to hide their aim
of a religious war through feigned sympathy for nationalism. They
exploit a growing siege mentality within the Muslim world.
Following September 11, many Muslims found themselves treated with
suspicion. This created a siege mentality. That siege mentality
was reinforced by the Iraq war, a war that started without cover
of the United Nations.
Despite Saddam's history of dictatorship and repression, many in
the Islamic world interpret the invasion of Iraq presaging a wider
attack against an array of Muslim countries including Iran, Yemen,
Somalia, Sudan, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and eventually Pakistan. The
recent sanctions against Syria reinforce this view.
While most Muslim intellectuals strongly condemn the attacks on
the World Trade Center, they believe that unaddressed political
problems and neglected social injustice provided a dish allowing
the germs of
terrorism and hatred to multiply.
The world is threatened but a military response is only part of
the solution to the problem of terrorism and the growing divide
between the Muslim and non-Muslim world.
The instability of the Iraqi occupation, the continuing
instability in Afghanistan, the deteriorating situation in the
Middle East between Israelis and Palestinians, and the unresolved
tragedy of Kashmir impact upon the people in the Street. No one
knows when the masses can become a mob and that mob strike out
against anything Western.
Some scholars argue that with its overwhelming military might and
allies, America must shed its imperial inhibitions and take on the
responsibility of reshaping the world. For them, the post Yalta
world is now redundant with the collapse of the Soviet Union. The
world is to be reshaped to mirror the new realities. Driven by a
sense of righteousness, the proponents of this theory find a moral
purpose in unilateral action.
Such scholars overlook the lessons of twentieth century history.
This history teaches us that the go it alone policy fails to build
the political support that must follow a military victory.
It was for this reason that one of America's great Presidents,
Woodrow Wilson, promoted the concept of collective security
and the principle of self-determination.
To prevent the acceleration of the clash of cultures,
civilizations and religions, collective security is important to
ensure world stability in the coming decades.
As Prime Minister of Pakistan, I stood up to the forces of
dictatorship that breed extremism by weakening democratic forces.
During the Afghan-Soviet war in the seventies and eighties,
Pakistan became the breeding ground for the political and
religious manipulation of the religious extremists. Pakistan's
then military dictator insisted on handling the fighters in
Afghanistan, known as the Jihadis, directly through his own
intelligence services.
He recruited and supported the most extreme elements in his bid to
undermine the moderate and democratic political forces of the
country. He justified his dictatorship under the guise of
implementing an Islamic system. He belonged to the Muslim
brotherhood and he brought in their supporters from all over the
world to Pakistan.
Exploiting the name of religion, he established thousands of
doctrinaire schools. These schools produced brainwashed young men
that could be sent off to fight the superpowers. First the
Soviets-and then the West.
But one must never give in;
To the fanatics and the extremists democracy and rule by elected
representatives.
To Islam at the crossroads, a modern, democratic Pakistan was one
fork in the road, fanaticism and ignorance the other.
With the failure of their attempted military coup in 1995, the
extremists worked with their supporters in the security
establishment to destabilise the democratic government I led.
My brother was murdered. The PPP President was blackmailed into
dismissing the PPP government. The elections, according to the
SAARC observers, was rigged and a pliant political protege of the
military dictator Zia ul Haq was brought in.
A psychological war was launched against the PPP to demonise its
leadership. Our government had been the obstacle to the triumph of
Taliban over all Afghanistan, to the invitation to Al Qaeda in
pursuit of the agenda of religious war and to the export of
extremism through Afghanistan, into Central Asia then to Chechnya
and onto the shores of Europe.
I am proud of my record as Prime Minister in containing
international terrorism and reducing tensions with India.
During my first tenure in office, we facilitated the formation of
an interim government of national consensus in Afghanistan where
the moderates and hard liners agreed to co-exist. During my
second tenure, my government confined the Taliban to Southern
Afghanistan prevailing upon them to enter negotiations with the
United Nations Special Envoy Mr. Brahmi.
With the eclipse of my government in late September 1996, the
Taliban seized Kabul imposing their will across Afghanistan. After
my overthrow on November 4, 1996, they openly invited in Osama Bin
Laden. In 1997, they allowed Bin Laden to establish Al Qaeda. Al
Qaeda set up camps without secrecy to recruit and train young men
from the Muslim world. As Leader of the Opposition in the
Pakistani Parliament, I called upon Islamabad to sever ties with
the Taliban in 1998. That call went unheeded.
On the India front, we had extraordinary progress with the first
nuclear confidence building treaty, the agreement not to attack
each other's respective nuclear facilities. We established a
hot line between the Pakistani and Indian leadership modelled
after the hot line between Washington and Moscow during the Cold
War. We opened up 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.
The PPP government was making dramatic progress in relations with
India and with containing terrorism in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
But moderation and progress is not what the Army hard-liners and
religious extremists could tolerate. I was their threat, and
I was eliminated. I am afraid, ladies and gentlemen, that the
consequences continue to ripple across Asia.
In the closing days of the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan,
I cautioned that the policy to defeat the Soviets had empowered
and emboldened the most fanatical, extremist elements of the
Afghan Mujahadeen at the expense of the moderates, creating a
"Frankenstein" that could come back to haunt us in the
future.
I fear now that the policy to support the Musharaf military
dictatorship to fight the war against terror is strengthening the
religious parties and extremists in Pakistan at the expense of the
moderates. They could turn into the new Frankenstein's monster
that haunts us in the future.
The fundamental mistake, which contributed to a long-term
historical calamity, was that we were not consistently committed
to the values of freedom, democracy and self-determination that
ultimately undermine and belie the basic tenets of terrorism.
The international community must
not repeat that mistake again.
Democracy and human rights must be
the centrepiece of policy around the world.
The international community need not coddle dictators to promote
its own interests. Its interest is democracy, not tyranny.
In Pakistan just as in Britain and around the world, those of us
who are committed to human rights and democracy abhor terrorism in
all of its murderous forms.
The goal of British policy must always be to simultaneously
promote stability and to strengthen democratic values.
Pakistan's military dictatorship has been ambiguous in its
opposition to terrorism. It has given mixed signals at home and
around the world.
Let me quote from a recent report by the International Crisis
Group entitled:
"Unfulfilled Promises: Pakistan's Failure to Tackle
Extremism:"
"Musharraf's failure owes less to the difficulty of
implementing reforms than to the military government's own
unwillingness. Indeed, he is following the pattern of the
country's previous military rulers in co-opting religious
extremists to support his government's agenda and to neutralize
his secular political opposition. Far from
combating extremism, the military government has promoted it
through its electoral policies and its failure to implement
effective reform. Whatever measures have so far been taken against
extremism have been largely cosmetic, to ease international
pressure."
Lt. Gen. David Barno, a senior US General, has expressed concern
over Islamabad's commitment to fighting Al Qaeda and the remnants
of Taliban in the tribal areas of Pakistan. Earlier the US
Ambassador to Afghanistan echoed similar sentiments with regard to
the Taliban.
In March, during a visit by the US Secretary of State to Pakistan,
Islamabad launched a much publicized campaign against Arab-Afghan
fighters in the tribal area of Wana. Islamabad's military dictator
hinted to CNN that Al Qaeda's number two, described as a high
value target, was surrounded and on the verge of capture. None of
this was true. No Arab Afghan was found. The only people caught
were Chechens and Uzbeks. The Pak army suffered high casualties
and some officers were taken hostage. Soon after Colin Powell
left, an amnesty was announced for those that fought and killed
Pak army officials.
A similar amnesty was announced for a Pak nuclear scientist who
confessed to selling nuclear products internationally. General
Musharaf said that, "he could keep the money too", a
reference to the two hundred million dollars reportedly milked
through the scandal. Those earlier arrested for corruption by
Musharaf when he seized power were forgiven and taken into the
Cabinet when they defected from their political parties. The sons
of the Generals who fought the first Afghan Jihad and reportedly
amassed vast riches by siphoning Jihad funds sit as proud members
of General Musharaf's handpicked cabinet.
Political opponents who proclaim their innocence and
confront a systematic campaign of perversion of justice are shown
no mercy by the military dictatorship.
As a leading scholar from the Carnegie Peace Institute put it,
"Nobody around the world's capitals is even asking why
General Musharaf's iron hand is reserved for his political critics
and opponents while he deploys amnesty and negotiated settlements
for alleged terrorists and militant tribesmen".
The government and people of the United Kingdom and the rest of
the world must remember that Pakistan has a brutal,
extra-constitutional military government with no democratic
legitimacy. More people in Pakistan than ever before are
unemployed and live below the poverty line.
Through the long years of super-power rivalry and the emergence of
Pakistan as a strategic partner in the fight against Communism,
the international community relied on the Pakistani military. I
would argue that in the war against terrorism, the international
community must reply on the strength of the people and not on the
strength of
militaries. The militaries are often the problem and not the
solution.
In several Muslim countries around the world, direct or indirect
dictatorships, relying on the backing of the military and of the
international community are causing resentment and anger amongst
the people. These dictators are seen as the proxies of the foreign
powers and feed the frenzy of xenophobia and anti western
sentiment that the
extremists and terrorist exploit. As the moderate forces are
squeezed, opposition shifts to the Masjids and to the political
sermons delivered by religious leaders following the prayer.
A democratic system allows peaceful and political change. It
permits pluralism. There is always an alternative available to the
people. Tragedy strikes when alternatives are missing. We saw it
in Afghanistan where the Taliban dictatorship refused to permit
political opposition and war became the only recourse. We saw it
in Iraq when the Baathist Party was the sole monopoliser of power
and short of war there was no alternative to peaceful, political
change.
War brings its own dangers. Dangers that lurk in casualties and
blood shed. And more dangers that lurk in the threat of a state
disintegrating in the event of a withdrawal. The bloody break up
of Yugoslavia is a recent example.
Autocrats do not become democrats by words; they become democrats
by deeds. And so far, the deeds of Musharraf are the deeds
of a military dictator. He has forced into exile the popular
leadership of the country. He sacked half of the Supreme Court of
Pakistan, including its chief justice. Members of the press that
write independently are roughed up, imprisoned or forced into
exile. One editor was forced into exile for running a story on
possible links between the security establishment and the
murderers of Wall St Journal reporter Danny Pearl.
The Musharaf dictatorship has build up the security establishment
as a state-within-a-state. There are two laws in Pakistan--one for
the civilians and another for the military. There are also two
separate educational opportunities, health opportunities, pension
opportunities, investment opportunities, economic benefits,
agricultural allotments,
bank loans, permits for commercial plazas, plush low cost housing
depending on whether one wears Mufti or Khaki. In fact the
agrarian feudal lords and the industrial robber barons have been
replaced by the Khaki class.
In Iraq members of the coalition forces die doing duty without
being given commercial, residential and agricultural holdings as
rewards. In Islamabad, the Generals get these rewards without
dying doing duty.
Perhaps it is naiveté by the West, or short-term myopia that has
led to disastrous courting of the Shah of Iran, Marcos of the
Philippines and Zia of Pakistan.
Pakistan, as has been observed by Arnold de Borchgrave, the UPI
Editor in Chief, is ' a nuclear power with two of its four
provinces governed by six politico-religious parties whose leaders
are friends of Taliban's Mullah Omar and al-Qaeda's Osama bin
Laden."
The so-called October 2002 elections in Pakistan were
blatant frauds engineered by Musharraf's electoral cells.
This fraud was exposed by the European community and election
monitors from all over the world. General Musharraf, for reasons
known only to himself, allowed the religious parties to make
significant gains by declaring that religious school diplomas
would be treated at par with University degrees. He then decreed
that only those with University degrees could contest elections.
His strategy is to tell the international community that only he
and the
Pakistani army stand in the way of a religious take over in
Pakistan. A powerful argument but a total fraud.
I was banned by special decree from contesting the October
elections. I have challenged that ban. Mullah Omar's teacher was
allowed to contest the elections and is now a member of
Parliament.
My husband, hostage to my political career, sits in a Musharraf
prison as we speak this evening.
This is the state of justice in Musharaff's Pakistan.
I ask myself why a man who simultaneously enjoys the powers of
Chief of Army Staff and President is afraid to let me lead my
party?
General Musharraf has nuclear tipped missiles and thousands of
tanks, but he does not have the people of Pakistan.
General Musharraf exploits the war on terrorism to protect his
dictatorship. Like his military predecessor General Zia he
uses Pakistan's critical importance to the international community
in Afghanistan as a smokescreen for his own dictatorship.
He undermines the popular Pakistan Peoples Party, using every
trick in the book to force its members to defect to strengthen the
religious parties.
The "fox" patrols the "hen house," while
the world seems to be asleep.
The best and only control for the excesses of extremism, is
accountability to the people. It is for this we pray in
Afghanistan. It is for this we pray in Pakistan. It is for
this we pray all over the world.
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