Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto's Address to
Diplomats at PPP Foreign Liaison
Committee Reception
Senate Hall - Islamabad -
10 November 2007

Ladies and gentlemen
I appreciate the opportunity
to have this conversation with you, especially at this most critical time in the
history of my nation.
Obviously Pakistan is at a
turning point, and the direction we follow will not only impact the future of my
nation, but I strongly believe will have a direct and immediate impact on the
stability of the region and the stability of the world.
I take this opportunity to
thank the International community for their support to the people of Pakistan in calling upon
General Musharaf to lift the curbs of the media, release political prisoners,
retire as Army Chief on schedule, and hold elections on schedule.
Democracy is morally right,
and even more important to this forum, democracy is the only viable way to
contain the growth of extremism, militancy and fanaticism that now threatens the
world.
My Party, Nation and I have
spent our lives fighting for democracy and for democratic governance. We are
fighting now for democracy to safeguard people’s rights and also to safeguard
the unity of
Pakistan. Our goal is to ensure that through empowerment, employment and
education, regions of my country cease being the Petri dish for international
and national terrorist plots that threaten us all.
Pakistan under dictatorship
is a pressure cooker. Without a place to vent, the passion of our people for
liberty threatens to explode. The current military dictatorship that rules my
country with an iron fist is opposing the inevitable forces of history. There is
not enough barbed wire, or bullets, or bayonets to defeat my people’s
unquestionable desire for democracy, for control over their own lives, for human
rights, gender equality, labour and minority rights and for a chance to build a
better life for their children. These are indeed the dreams of the Pakistani
people and of all people. These are universal values.
It is eleven years since
the destabilization of the democratic government I led but it has failed to
crush the will and support of the people for a representative government that
addresses the bread and butter issues of our people, 74% of whom live in
poverty. Poverty has increased as has joblessness since the PPP government, with
a 6% growth rate, without 10 billions of aid, was overthrown.
Yesterday my home was
surrounded and I was unofficially put under house arrest because this military
regime did not want the world to see that the people of Pakistan want change, want
freedom, and want liberty. The garrison town of Pindi was cut off and
surrounded. With blockades, barbed wire and the motorway closed. For 8 hours
people were gassed and beaten. The brutal images of police beating innocent
women were on every television screen on Earth. Tomorrow people of Sindh will
hold protest meetings in every district to show solidarity with the people of
Rawalpindi.
In Pakistan we say that there
are two tests for the success of a public meeting. When the government does not
use coercive methods to stop a meeting, the success is judged by the number of
people present.
On October 18 the people of
Pakistan held the most historic rally in the history of Pakistan when three
million turned out in Karachi, stretching all the way back on the National
Highway to receive me to express their hope that my return would be a catalyst
of a change from dictatorship to democracy.
The second test of a popular
public meeting is the amount of police force and measures used to block the
peoples participation. The amount of force and restrictive measures is
proportionate to the number of people expected to turn out and attend a public
meeting.
Force was used to bring
closure of Northern
Pakistan on November 9, 2007. There was tear-gassing, baton charging, arrest of
5000 activists, including women parliamentarians from Peshwar to Rawalpindi,
Karachi to Pindi, Lahore to Pindi and Islamabad to Pindi. The amount of force
used was, according to our calculation,to stop a gathering of a million people.
By both tests, coercive and non-coercive, the people rose to the occasion.
Now the ball is in the
regime’s court. We have called for a Long March from Lahore
from November 13, 2007. This is the March for Freedom, freedom from
dictatorship, from militancy from poverty and unemployment.
The current regime has
convinced some Nations that General Musharaf alone stands in the way of a
nuclear armed, fundamentalist Pakistan. This is a
misperception. The religious parties in Pakistan have never received more than
11% of the vote in any election and they would receive less today. It is
dictatorship that fuels extremism. The dictatorship of 80’s created the Afghan
Mujahideen which morphed into Taliban and Al-Qaeda. The political partners of
that dictatorship hold key positions in the political, administrative and
security institutions of this dictatorship. They cannot, and have not contained
extremism nor reduced poverty. They have exacerbated the situation to an extent
where nuclear armed Pakistan is threatened with implosion.
Only a popularly elected
democratic government with the mandate of the people has the political base to
undermine the militants and bring peace to the people of Pakistan.
Dictatorship does not
contain fanaticism. Dictatorship causes fanaticism.
Ladies and gentlemen, Pakistan plays a central
role in the direction of one billion Muslims on this planet. A Pakistan which
is moderate, enlightened, modern can be a model to the people in the Muslim
world who have to choose between the forces of the past and the forces of the
future. Pakistan can be critical to democratic development and the containment
of extremism all over Asia and Africa, and can spare our global community
further senseless attacks from the forces of hatred.
The enemies of
reconciliation amongst our peoples and our nations are trying desperately to
provoke a clash of civilizations. These fanatics thrive on chaos. They thrive
on the desperation that comes from dictatorship. Democracy suffocates them by
giving people choices and giving people hope.
The PPP and I negotiated
with General Musharaf’s regime for a peaceful transition to democracy. We worked
on a road map for fair elections and transition to democracy.
Tragically, suddenly General
Musharaf suspended the constitution and imposed Martial Law. This Martial law
has been called an Emergency for International consumption.
The PPP has called upon
General Musharaf to:
§
Revive the
Constitution and with it the judges.
§
Retire as
Chief of Army Staff on November 15 as scheduled.
§
Hold general
elections called on November 15 on schedule for January 15, 2008.
§
Re-constitute
the Election Commission and implement election reforms including an interim government of national consensus to oversee the elections, suspension of the
Mayors for the elections period, appointment of impartial officials to important
government positions, a fair voter account, no improvised polling stations and
other such measures.
§
End of
political victimization
§
Lifting of
curbs on the media.
Pakistan is in a crisis. Our
country, armed forces, police, women, judges, lawyers, minorities, labour,
peasants, students, intellectuals and youth are under assault, some by the
militants, others by the military regime.
The choice must not be
between the military or the militants the choice must be for the will of the
people, for democracy.
If for no other reason than
your own national self-interest, stand with us in our demand for free and fair
elections with robust international monitoring.
The Taliban are coming
nearer and nearer. I do not want to be melodramatic. But it is the harsh reality
that they came from the mountains of Tora Bora to the tribal areas. First one
agency fell, then another as the government struck ceasefires and peace treaties
with them. Bajaur fell, Khyber fell, Waziristan fell. Now towns
in Swat are falling. Madyan fell, Kalam fell. Today they knock on the doors of
Shangla Hills.
The Freedom March, the
caravan of democracy is not about Benazir Bhutto. This is not a about the
Pakistan Peoples Party. This is about saving Pakistan from disintegration
at the hands of militants who have grown in strength under a military
dictatorship. They threaten us all. The people of Pakistan cannot be allowed to
fall from one dictatorship to another, from military dictatorship to religious
dictatorship. I have returned to help my people. My supporters, often from
working families, often young, are risking their lives to save Pakistan by
saving democracy. My Father gave his life for the democratic rights of the
people.
We don’t accept tyranny. Our
cause is just, our path is right for it is the path of truth, the path of the
people. We appeal to all the people of our country to walk with us on our common
destination towards freedom. We ask the international community to give us moral
support.
We believe that victory and
defeat are in the hands of God, as is life and death, but we must do what is
right, what is just. We must raise our voices and begin the journey in the great
walk from tyranny to freedom.
Thank you.
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