You can imprison a man, but not an
idea. You can exile a man, but not an idea. You can kill a man, but not an
idea. -- Benazir
Bhutto
My country mourns. And as my countrymen join me
in personal grief over the loss of my mother, I join them in national grief
over the loss of something even greater: the loss of Pakistan's greatest
voice for democracy.
Benazir Bhutto's death, however, shall not have
been in vain. We will go forward, as she would have wanted, and bring
freedom and democracy to Pakistan.
For those in my country who would find it easier
to walk away from democracy and seek revenge
through violence, I urge you to remember my mother's words: democracy is
the sweetest revenge. To plunge the country into more violence and chaos
would only play into the hands of those who hope for democracy's failure.
The terrorists have no use for democracy, and the current government fears
it. We must unite and rise above both.
And to those outside of my country, who support
our fight for democracy, I urge you to consider this: We cannot oppose one
form of tyranny while turning a blind eye to another. Together, we must
stand against the violence of the terrorists on the one hand, while standing
equally firm against Pervez Musharraf's use of it as an excuse to impose his
own repressive will upon the people of Pakistan.
Musharraf has made a mockery of our
constitution. The world watched in disbelief as he declared emergency rule
and sent troops into the streets in November – not because of a terrorist
threat to the government, but a constitutional threat to his autocratic grip
on power. The men he threw into jails were not terrorists but Supreme Court
judges and respected lawyers. The newspapers he intimidated were not organs
of terrorists but of free and independent citizens of Pakistan.
My mother stood bravely against both the tyranny
of terrorism as well as the tyranny of dictatorship. She has been martyred
for her courage and pursuit of pursuit of freedom, but now that courage and
pursuit has been bequeathed to the to the people of Pakistan. We shall
carry on.
It will take the kind of courage my mother
showed showed. It will take courage among her loyal followers to calm their
anger and renounce violence or revenge. We must instead demand fair and open
elections, free of government intimidation, and then make our show of force
on election day.
It will also take courage on the part of Pervez
Musharraf and those who have supported his government, including those
outside of Pakistan.
With my country's judges and lawyers still in
jail, its free media intimidated and silenced, and its political leaders
unsafe to walk the streets, we cannot pretend to have free and open
elections. There can be no legitimacy to elections held under such ominous
conditions. Those who espouse the virtues of democracy cannot stand by
idly and maintain their credibility while this repression continues.
Our free and independent Supreme Court must be
restored; the justices jailed by Musharraf must released and returned to
their proper seats, replacing the cronies with which Musharraf has packed
the current court. Our other judges, lawyers and civic dissidents must be
freed. The intimidation campaign waged against the free media must be
halted. International election observers must be allowed to monitor our
elections to ensure against government intimidation. And, finally, a
credible international commission must be allowed to investigate the
mysterious circumstances of my mother's assassination. Only after these
steps are taken can we begin the honorable march to democracy and stability.
For those who think that by supporting
dictatorship they are somehow securing stability in Pakistan, I can say only
this: Where is that stability today? My country teeters on the precipice
of anarchy not because of any actions by radicals or terrorists but because
of the unchecked and power-mad actions of a military dictator.
Pakistanis will soon hold the most important
election in our history. We have reached a tipping point. We will either
unite behind democracy and the fight against radicalism and violence, or we
will descend into the all-too-familiar cycles of despotism, terror and
instability.
Those of us who will fight for democracy must
make our stand now. Then, together, a united and democratic government can
turn its attention to the extremists and terrorists who seek to undermine
freedom in our country and throughout the world.