International Women’s Leadership Forum
Message
from Ms Benazir Bhutto
San Francisco,
California September 25, 1997

Ladies and Gentlemen:
It is an honour for me to be able to
communicate with you today, on tape.
I had very much wanted to be with you in
person in San Francisco, but due to the continuing physical and legal
harassment of my family, myself and my political party by the Islamabad
regime, it was impossible for me to leave the country at this critical
moment.
Distinguished friends,
I have great empathy for that amazing leader
of democracy, Aung San Suu Kyi, who of course could not be with you today,
because she would not be allowed to return to her country if she left. Suu
Kyi, the democratically elected leader of Burma is in constant danger,
under constant threat, a vulnerable yet brave inspiration to us all.
I had wished to be with the International
Leadership Forum because it would have given me the opportunity to talk,
exchange information and network with a truly extraordinary group of women
who have overcome all obstacles and succeeded in politics, government,
business, the academy and the arts.
Women like Kim Campbell, the former Prime
Minister of the great western country of Canada, who overcame barriers and
obstacles and bigots to lead her Party and her nation through a most
difficult period of Canadian history. Knowing all odds were against
her did not stop her from assuming leadership. She is a model of
determination and grace.
I wanted to be with the extraordinary group
of renaissance women assembled in San Francisco today, who have broken
ceilings and broken ground -- often at considerable personal
cost, so that my daughters Baktawar and Asifa, and billions like them
across the planet, will someday have limitless opportunities for growth,
development and productivity.
All of us gathered together today have a
dream. We who sacrificed much, suffered much but struggled on to achieve
success dream that our daughters and grand daughters will not have to
face, the discriminatory barriers that have been put in our paths
-- yours and mine -- by those entrenched forces who even
today cling to the shreds of the status quo, immobilized by fear of
social, economic, cultural and political change.
As we cross into a new century and new
millennium, we should take stock of where we were, where we are, and where
we are going.
The twentieth century was a century which
witnessed two world wars the rise of Communism, the holocaust, the
dominance of dictatorial regimes of oppression and tyranny. A century
where states often sought to crush the dignity of men and women. But in
the twilight of this century the indomitable spirit of humankind rose to
arrest itself. From the ashes of the cold war arose an era marked by
universal demands for freedom, for democracy, for dignity for men and yes,
more important, for woman. A world dawned which witnessed the emergence of
a global value system based on human rights. All of us gathered here today
believe that any denial of human rights -- the right to life,
to liberty, to self-determination, liberty, to gender equality... the
right to equal opportunity to education, to jobs, to health care, to
housing -- any abridgment of these fundamental human rights is
unconscionably and inexcusably inhumane.
Those who are gathered believe and justice
and modernity.
These were the principles that guided me in
my two terms as Prime Minister of Pakistan.
The team I led propelled Pakistan into the
modern era, where our children would be trained in the technologies of the
21st century for the jobs of the third millennium. Where our country would
become a heaven for investment, a crossroads between the ancient silk
routes and the west.
Our restoration of macroeconomic stability
was the centerpiece to our modernization program. It was the impetus
for insuring the confidence of businessmen and businesswomen throughout
the world in the economic potential of Pakistan.
As a measure of our success, foreign
investment in Pakistan during my second term as Prime Minster was 5 times
larger than the foreign investment in Pakistan in the previous 25 years
combined!
Our priority was nation building. Our goal
was to rebuild the infrastructure of our nation to make Pakistan an
economic leader in our region and in the world of the new century.
And in large measure, we succeeded:
We tackled the problem of power shut downs
which had crippled our economy by providing incentives to the energy
sector. The World Bank called our energy program a role model to the
entire developing world.
We brought our energy revolution directly to
the people of Pakistan. In 3 years we successfully electrified over 21,000
villages in our rural areas with the aim of electrifying every village in
Pakistan.
We built 30,000 primary schools to bring the
light of knowledge to our children. We recruited 53,000 teachers, 70 per
cent of them women for these new schools.
When I became Prime Minister one in five
children born with polio in the world was a Pakistani. As a mother, that
was not a statistic I was prepared to live with. So we launched an
anti-polio campaign which international bodies called the most successful
in the world.
As one of the nine most populated countries
in the world, population control remained a priority for us. I traveled to
Cairo to attend the UN sponsored conference on Population Welfare. Our
government introduced programs to reduce Pakistan's population growth rate
from 3.1% to 2.6%. And for this we recruited 50,000 Lady Health Workers
who went from home to home educating women on how to take charge of their
lives, their families and their destiny.
As a modern woman, I sought to make Pakistan
a modern state. Our government introduced the information revolution,
bringing fax machines into every office, cellular telephones into every
business and CNN into every home with a television. We opened up our
society by opening up minds.
It was, my friends, a miraculous
transformation of a society, a transformation that cannot be negated by
personal attacks upon me. What we accomplished -- concretely and
specifically -- is my legacy to the 130 million people of Pakistan.
Distinguished friends,
Soon we shall be entering a new millennium.
It is more than a millennium that we are
crossing. It is a fundamental charge in the way people live, in how
nations conduct themselves.
With the explosion of information and
technology that has taken place over the last two decades, the world has
changed dramatically. It is nothing short of a revolution brought
about not by guns and bullets, but by Pentium chips and megabytes of
information.
Because of open communication, people all
over the world were exposed in a very real sense to freedom --
freedom to chose political leaders, freedom to pursue education and
careers, freedom for consumers, freedom of the press and religion.
Access to information, the real key to
social, political and economic change, is now within reach of almost
everyone on earth, in huts as well as cities, in villages as well as
villas, to the daughters of beggars as well as the sons of barons.
The internet is the great equalizer.
The technology which emanated from the Silicon Valley of California, has
more potential to ameliorate social inequality than any development in the
history of the world, including the industrial revolution.
With the globalization of information and
technology, has come a remarkable globalization of relations between
states.
The most recent political and economic
manifestation of this trend is the creation of the World Trade
Organization, which is the first institutional step, to the demise of the
closed nation-state as we have known it for a thousand years.
Open trade, open communications, open borders
and a universal international culture are creating an emerging class of
new citizens of a new world, a global citizen with a global outlook for a
world of global values.
A global culture is emerging with global
values. A culture and a value system which recognizes no territorial
boundaries.
The way we dress, speak, eat is becoming
increasingly similar. What we see, what we hear from news on CNN, to
computers from IBM is also becoming similar. Our demands are also similar
-- democracy, freedom, equality.
The successor generation of young people have
the greatest opportunity for insuring a pluralistic and tolerant and
global 21st century. Today's young, your children and mine, are the
children of the future, of the new century, the new world, the new
information state.
They are the ones who will move from the
trees of the past to the forests of the future.
They are the ones who will leave behind a
past, a past of their mothers, where mothers had to prove we could and
would succeed. They will enter a future where a woman's right to work, to
achieve, to succeed will be taken for granted.
I pray that my daughters, and your, will
enter a future where women are not mocked at, scoffed at or scandalized
simply because we are women.
I pray for a future for our daughters and
grand daughters where women are respected for their talent, education,
their work, and their intelligence.
In that future lies are vindication.
God bless you, and Godspeed.
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