Outlaw Tyrant Mush must resign before 18 February
2008 to make the Pakistan elections free and fair.
(InformPress.com) - It has been more than a month
since my wife, Benazir Bhutto, was assassinated, and
little has been done to identify the forces that
ordered, planned and funded her murder. The forensic
evidence was destroyed almost immediately after the
assassination, and though Pervez Musharraf
reluctantly allowed Britain's Scotland Yard to enter
the country, its investigation was constrained.
Indeed, when Musharraf told Scotland Yard that he
would not allow "wild goose chases" to investigate
officials in his government and party, the
perception of a cover-up permeated Pakistani
society.
Sadly, recent polls show that half the people of
Pakistan believe that the government was in some way
involved in the murder. This uncertainty and
cynicism undermines the legitimacy of Pakistan's
government. Only an independent United Nations
investigation would have the credibility to uncover
the truth.
As Benazir Bhutto so presciently predicted,
extremists continue to flourish under the Musharraf
regime, with dictatorship fueling the people's
frustration and desperation. Hardly a day goes by
without flagrant challenges by 'terrorists' to the
government. 'Suicide' bombers continue their reign
of terror, beyond the tribal areas bordering
Afghanistan into our country and into the very heart
of our cities. The Government of Pakistan is not
only unwilling to mobilize public support in the
'war against terrorism', it is totally incapable of
mobilizing the people.
Indeed, during Musharraf's recent trip to Europe, he
casually admitted that finding Osama bin Laden or
his principal deputy, Ayman Zawahiri, thought by
many to be hiding in Pakistan, is not a priority for
his regime.
Instead of trying to mobilize the people to confront
and contain terrorism, Musharraf is spending his
time and energy trying to cling to power and rig the
18 February 2008 elections. In October 2002,
Musharraf brazenly rigged parliamentary elections,
despite the presence of teams of international
election observers, who did not hesitate to condemn
the fraud. Yet the silence from Washington and
London empowered the despots. If they got away with
it in 2002 with the whole world watching, why should
they think there will be consequences if they do it
again in 2008?
The National Democratic Institute (NDI) has
documented massive pre- election rigging, and the
International Republican Institute (IRI) was
sufficiently appalled by the election environment
that it pulled out of the country. Both are
U.S.-based, non-governmental organizations. Europe
has voiced concern about the election process, and
the European Union observers would not legitimize a
fraud.
But Washington remains painfully silent. By
suggesting that an election under these dreadful
conditions can be "good" if not "perfect," as a
senior U.S. State Department official claimed before
Congress, many believe that the Bush Administration
has functionally given Musharraf and his cronies the
green light to rig the election -- just don't get
caught red-handed.
It is time for the free world to have its policies
match its rhetoric. American President George W.
Bush should join U.S. Congressional leaders from
both Democratic and Republican parties in pressing
for an independent U.N. investigation of my wife's
murder. The Administration should also make clear
the minimum standards of a free and fair election in
Pakistan that the international community would find
acceptable.
Those standards would include an election
administered by a new neutral caretaker government
and independent election commission -- one monitored
by trained international observers with the
authority to conduct exit polls to check on the
government's count, and to make spot, unannounced
visits to any polling place. An independent (azad or
free) judiciary must be instituted through a
bipartisan process. And all the restrictions that
smother the Pakistani media must be lifted.
I am not asking anyone to guarantee an outcome;
neither did my wife. But the Pakistan People's Party
(PPP) is asking the world to guarantee a free and
open process. If the election is free and fair, we
believe that our party will be able to establish a
broad-based government with other democratic parties
to promote national unity and reconciliation. Under
such circumstances, the Dawn newspaper in Pakistan
stated that the PPP and other democratic parties
would win a "sweeping victory" and Musharraf's party
would be marginalized. Yet everyone fears that
Musharraf will flagrantly cook the books like he did
with impunity in 2002. But the stakes are much
higher now. Only a legitimately elected democratic
government with a popular mandate can deal with the
critical issues facing Pakistan.
Tragically, it is too late for Benazir Bhutto. But
it is not too late for the people of Pakistan. Let a
democratic and moderate future for Pakistan be my
wife's legacy.