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Commentary: Murder Inc.
Pakistan Peoples Party Blog Moderated By Nashia Ahmad Gabol on 10/28/2007 4:00 PM
By ARNAUD DE BORCHGRAVE
UPI Editor at Large

No sooner did Benazir Bhutto narrowly escape a two-man suicide bombing attack than she faced the next death threat of many more to come. Like paparazzi chasing down a celebrity, would-be assassins will be dogging her every step as she leads her Pakistan People’s Party in the coming election campaign to reclaim Pakistan’s prime ministership, from which she was deposed in 1990 and again in 1996.Five days after 140 people were killed and some 400 wounded in Bhutto’s brush with martyrdom, she received a two-page handwritten letter in Urdu from a “friend of al-Qaida” that threatened to eliminate her “by any means.”Frighteningly long lists of plots are being hatched by a wide variety of extremist organizations and groups. And there is no shortage of killers and volunteers for suicide bombings, martyrs anxious to die for a new global caliphate. Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf himself has been the target of nine assassination attempts, two by suicide bombers. Conspiracy is Pakistan’s middle name.Government sleuths reassembled body parts to get a lead on the would-be assassins. Released to the media were ghoulish photos of the severed head of what the police were certain was one of the perpetrators. Pakistani intelligence from a northern tribal territory reported another 30 suicide bombers had been assigned to “high-value political targets.”Radical groups pollute Pakistan’s political scene. Since Sept. 11, 2001, when Musharraf, under U.S. pressure, dumped his Taliban proteges, extremist groups, once encouraged by the all-powerful Inter-Services Intelligence agency for the “liberation” of Indian Kashmir, were ordered to shut down. Many of them had offices in the major cities that were closed only to reopen with a different name a block or two away.The most ominous warning of all for Bhutto came from the federal railways minister, Sheik Rashid Ahmad. He accused her of “raising the flag of imperialism (i.e., Bush administration support), which means she “will have to face suicide attacks. We have already conveyed to her that the ground realities have changed (since she was last in her country eight years ago).”This perennial Cabinet minister ran a jihadi training camp in the 1980s. He also served in the previous military government under President Zia ul-Haq. As Musharraf’s information minister, he was known as a champion spin doctor who affects an always-in-the-know image. This time he inadvertently validated Bhutto’s claim that some elements in Musharraf’s government collude with militant radicals assigned to sabotage her political comeback.Ahmad is a close friend of retired Gen. Hamid Gul, a former ISI chief who acts as strategic adviser to the Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal coalition of six politico-religious extremist parties that governs two of Pakistan’s four provinces (Baluchistan and the Northwest Frontier province). Gul hates the United States -- and anything Washington favors -- with a passion. He assisted the creation of the Taliban in the early 1990s and to this day believes the Sept. 11 al-Qaida attacks were a plot engineered by Israel’s Mossad, the CIA and the U.S. Air Force. (“How come no fighters were scrambled to take on the planes you say were hijacked?” he asked this reporter.)From al-Qaida and Taliban sanctuaries in the tribal areas on the Afghan border to Karachi, a teeming port city of 15 million some 600 miles away, there are tens of thousands of fanatics who would love to see Bhutto dead. To lengthen the odds, the government banned political rallies and street demonstrations. But she will still have television, now accessible to 60 percent of the country. The privately owned ARY television network has 12 24/7 channels for news and commentary and for everything from food to fashion. ARY Chief Executive Officer Salman Iqbal was in Washington and New York this month to recruit “intellectual talent” for a new a “think tank” channel, directed by Ammar Turabi. It will focus on counter-terrorism, human rights and distance learning.Despite the newly acquired accoutrements of modernity, a large part of Pakistan is still stuck in the past. More than half its 160 million people are illiterate. And aligned against Bhutto’s return to power are renegade ISI cadres; the nationwide MMA coalition of extremists throughout the country; supporters of the late military dictator ul-Haq, who seized power from Bhutto’s father, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, and then ordered him executed by hanging (Zia himself died in a mysterious plane crash in 1988 and Benazir became prime minister in a restored civilian government); and the countless flat-Earth clerics and their followers who regard a female leader as an abomination.Yet Bhutto’s popularity in this deeply divided society remains high. And her Pakistan People’s Party is the country’s largest, backed and funded by a burgeoning middle class in a country with an annual growth rate of 7 percent. Her power-sharing deal with Musharraf called for corruption charges against her to be dropped as she returned from self-imposed exile in London and Dubai, in exchange for which Musharraf would doff his general's uniform after the Supreme Court certifies his election to another five-year term. He seized power in a bloodless military coup eight years ago.Several hundred lame-duck lawmakers from four provincial assemblies, the federal Assembly and the Senate re-elected him recently; all opposition parties boycotted the balloting.Assuming all goes according to plan -- always a big "if" in Pakistan -- the big question will be who will wield the most clout on defense and internal security matters? Bhutto believes the seven troubled tribal areas on the Afghan border, now under the sway of al-Qaida, the Taliban and assorted jihadis from Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, can be brought to heel by introducing political parties and election campaigning to the Federally Administered Tribal Areas.Today only the MMA is authorized to recruit and propagandize in the FATA. The MMA is pro-Taliban and its leaders are self-avowed admirers of Osama bin Laden, the world’s most wanted terrorist. Pakistan’s mainstream political parties are not welcome in North and South Waziristan where the Taliban and al-Qaida rule and where Pakistani troops are loath to fight.Pakistani intelligence reported from the northern tribal territories another 30 suicide bombers had been assigned to terminate high-value political targets. Bhutto is now the target with the highest value. The late ul-Haq once said his greatest mistake was not killing Bhutto the daughter as he had ordered the execution of her father. Benazir’s assassination would relegate Pakistan to “failing nuclear state.”

http://www.upi.com/International_Security/Emerging_Threats/

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Mohtarma Bhutto address press conference in Karachi
Pakistan Peoples Party Blog Moderated By Nashia Ahmad Gabol on 10/20/2007 4:00 PM
Islamabad October 19, 2007: Former Prime Minister and Chairperson of the Pakistan Peoples Party Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto addressed a press conference in Bilawal House Karachi today.

Following is the statement she made at the press conference that was attended by scores of foreign and local media.

"The PPP strongly condemns the attack on its peaceful procession last night near the Karsaz Bridge in Karachi that resulted in the killing of nearly 140 innocent people and injury to several hundreds more.

"Our thoughts, prayers and sympathies are with those who laid down their lives, or were wounded and to their families. They made the ultimate sacrifice for the
cause of democracy and the fundamental rights of the people. May Allah rest their souls in eternal peace. Their sacrifices will not go in vain.

"I am also pained to learn that a TV camera man Mr. Arif and a number of police personnel on duty were also killed and injured. They all died in the line of duty. May their souls rest in peace. Our thoughts and prayers are with the bereaved families.

"The cowardly people who planned the assassination attack on me are not Muslims. No Muslim can attack a woman. I am thankful to Almighty Allah for protecting me through the Benazir Jaanisars and the police who all lost their lives in defending me and the top leadership of the PPP including Vice President MAF, former Speaker Yousuf Raza Gillani, Secretary General Jehangir Badr, Deputy Parliamentary Leader Raja Pervez Ashraf, Qasim Zia Opposition Leader in Punjab Assembly, Leader of theOpposition in Sindh Assembly Nisar Khuhro, Information Secretary Sherry Rehman, Political Secretary Naheed Khan, Security Advisor Dr Rehman Malik, Senator Safdar Abbasi, Ambassador Abida Hussain, and many others.

"Three people on our truck lost their lives. There was blood and gore all over our clothes and street was littered with dead bodies and blood.

The police bravely did their duty. Our young boys, the flower of our youth and the best of our future wrote a new chapter in courage and sacrifice by defending their sister and leadership. We remember and honour them. We honour their parents, who gave birth to such noble sons, who with their brave hands defended us against armed militants, who want to destroy Pakistan, damage the name of Islam and hurt the rights of the Muslims. I salute them and their families. Their supreme sacrifice will be written in golden letters.

"I wish to thank all the Party cadres, workers, and all those who trekked long distances to welcome me back to the country. Their support and solidarity is unforgettable.

"I also wish to thank all those who travelled with me or ahead me from far off lands. They showed great courage in accompanying me despiteknowing the hazards of doing so. To them also I say thank you.

"I have received a large number of telephone calls and messages of sympathy from all over the world. I wish to thank them all.

"What does the attack last night signify? The attack was more an attack on the unity and integrity of the country than on any individual or any one political party. It was an attack on Pakistan itself. It was an attack on their political rights, on the political process and on democracy itself.

"The attack last night was a message sent by the enemies of democracy to all the political parties of the country. It was intended to intimidate and black-mail all the political forces and elements working for democracy and human rights in the country. It was a warning not only to me and the PPP but to all political parties- indeed to the entire civil society- in the country.

"Dictatorship fuels the forces of extremism and narcotics trade. Fearing democracy, these cowards attacked a woman and unarmed innocent men and children.

"The attack was intended to warn the people against exercising their right to participate in the political process for the attainment of their social, economic and political rights.

"But let it be known to the perpetrators of the crime that the PPP will not be deterred. The Party would never allow its voice in support of the peoples' political and democratic rights stifled. We will continue to raise voice and fight for the peoples' rights, come what may.

"It is imperative for all of us to fight to save Pakistan by saving democracy. Democracy brings development and marginalizes the anti-people forces.

"We must save Pakistan, save democracy and save the fundamental rights of the people.

"The PPP will offer ghaaibana janaza prayers day after tomorrow on October 21 in all district headquarters for all those who lost their lives and also prayers for the speedy recovery of those injured. We invite all the democratic parties and forces and members of civil society to join us on the occasion.

"I thank all the people who called to condole the deaths of the PPP workers and wished an early recovery to those injured. These include General Pervez Musharraf, President Hamid Karzai, L. K. Advani, Mian Nawaz Sharif, Altaf Hussain, Indian High Commission, the US Ambassador, Ghulam Mustafa Jatoi, the Italian Ambassador, Senator Asfandyar Wali, and many others.

"I also want to thank the 3 million people, who came from far and wide to greet me on my return from the exile from all over Pakistan. They came from Korakarum Pass, AJK, Northern Areas, Tribal Areas, plains of Punjab, deserts of Sindh, and Balochistan, singing, dancing, full of joy in celebration to mark a return that could be a catalyst to change, to democracy. We will not let the militants destroy the hopes of our people for freedom and prosperity despite the tragedy that followed the triumph."

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Going home to Pakistan: We represent the future
Pakistan Peoples Party Blog Moderated By Nashia Ahmad Gabol on 10/20/2007 4:00 PM

Benazir Bhutto arrives in Karachi with a prescription for her country
BENAZIR BHUTTO
From Thursday's Globe and Mail
October 18, 2007 at 10:18 AM EDT

As I board the plane that takes me home to Pakistan today, I carry with me a manuscript of a book I am writing that will be published shortly.
It is a treatise on the reconciliation of the values of Islam and the West and a prescription for a moderate and modern Islam that marginalizes religious extremists, returns the military from politics to their barracks, treats all citizens and especially women with full and equal rights, selects its leaders by free and fair elections, and provides for transparent, democratic governance that addresses the social and economic needs of the people as its highest priority.
To me, this is not just a book but a campaign manifesto, a guide to governing. If the people of Pakistan honour me again with an opportunity to lead, I fully intend to practise what I preach, to have my actions match my rhetoric and to make Pakistan a positive model for one billion Muslims around the world.
For 60 years, my nation has lurched between military dictatorships and democracy. The promise that is Pakistan has been stifled by political oppression and economic stagnation. For almost a decade, we have been ruled by a military dictatorship. For the past five years, we have been challenged by an international terrorism movement that seems, unfortunately, to have the tribal areas of Pakistan at its very epicentre. These are not ordinary times, and they require extraordinary solutions.
Over the past several months, I have negotiated with General Pervez Musharraf to simultaneously ensure a transition to democracy in Pakistan and to mobilize the moderate middle of our society to confront and contain fanatics and extremists. It has been a difficult process, made even more difficult by the resistance of many who now enjoy power in Pakistan to accepting a democratic alternative.
But the long discussions have borne some fruit. In September, Gen. Musharraf promised Pakistan's Supreme Court he would retire from the post of army chief before taking the oath of office for President for a new term. This month, the government of Pakistan announced a set of confidence-building measures codified initially in the Ordinance of National Reconciliation to pave the way for a legitimate and accountable Parliament.
It is not a perfect agreement, and it certainly is not an end to the process. But it is an important beginning to the transition to democracy, with the goal of bringing reform and political change without the chaos and bloodshed under which extremism and militancy thrive. In the next phase, more confidence-building measures are expected.
As I board the plane to Pakistan, I am fully aware that the supporters of the Taliban and al-Qaeda have publicly threatened my assassination.
Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud has said his terrorists will "welcome" me on my return. Everyone understands the meaning of these comments. And I fully understand the men behind al-Qaeda. They have tried to assassinate me twice before. The Pakistan People's Party and I represent everything they fear the most - moderation, democracy, equality for women, information and technology. We represent the future of a modern Pakistan, a future that has no place in it for ignorance, intolerance and terrorism.
The forces of moderation and democracy must, and will, prevail against extremism and dictatorship. I will not be intimidated. I will step out on the tarmac in Karachi not to complete a journey, but to begin one. Despite the death threats, I will not acquiesce to tyranny, but lead the fight against it.
Ms. Bhutto, the former prime minister of Pakistan, returned to her native land today after eight years in exile.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20071018.wcobhutto18/BNStory/Front

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VIEW: Beginning a new journey?
Pakistan Peoples Party Blog Moderated By Nashia Ahmad Gabol on 10/19/2007 4:00 PM

By Benazir Bhutto

The forces of moderation and democracy must, and will, prevail against extremism and dictatorship. I will not be intimidated. Despite threats of death, I will not acquiesce to tyranny, but rather lead the fight against itAs I board the plane that takes me home to Pakistan today, I carry with me a manuscript of a book. It is a treatise on the reconciliation of the values of Islam and the West and a prescription for a moderate, modern Islam that marginalises extremists, returns the military from politics to their barracks, treats all citizens and especially women equally and selects its leaders by free and fair elections.To me this is not just a book but a campaign manifesto, a guide to governing. If the people of Pakistan honour me again with an opportunity to lead, I intend to practise what I preach and to make Pakistan a positive model to one billion Muslims around the world for our future.For 60 years my nation has lurched between dictatorships and democracy. Pakistan has been stifled by political oppression and economic stagnation. For almost a decade we have been ruled by a military dictatorship. For the past five years we have been challenged by an international terrorism movement that seems to have the tribal areas of Pakistan at its very epicentre. These are not ordinary times, and they require extraordinary solutions.Over the past few months I have negotiated with General Pervez Musharraf to ensure a transition to democracy and to mobilise the moderate middle of our society to confront and contain fanatics and extremists. It has been difficult, made more so by the resistance of many who now enjoy power in Pakistan to accepting a democratic alternative. But the long discussions have borne some fruit.In September General Musharraf promised to Pakistan’s Supreme Court to retire from the post of Army Chief before taking the oath of office for President for a new term. This month the government of Pakistan announced confidence-building measures to pave the way for a legitimate, accountable Parliament. It is not a perfect agreement, but it is an important beginning, bringing reform and political change closer without the chaos and bloodshed under which extremism and militancy thrive.The supporters of the Taliban and Al Qaeda have threatened my assassination. The Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud has said that his terrorists will “welcome” me on my return. And the men behind Al Qaeda have tried to assassinate me twice before. The Pakistan People’s Party and I represent everything they fear the most — moderation, democracy, equality for women, information and technology. We represent the future, a future that has no place in it for ignorance, intolerance and terrorism.The forces of moderation and democracy must, and will, prevail against extremism and dictatorship. I will not be intimidated. I will step out on the tarmac in Karachi in a few hours not to complete a journey, but to begin one. Despite threats of death, I will not acquiesce to tyranny, but rather lead the fight against it.Benazir Bhutto is twice former prime minister of Pakistan. As you read this, she has already landed in Karachi where large crowds had gathered to greet her. This piece appeared in The Times of London yesterday to sync with her landing in Karachi

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2007\10\19\story_19-10-2007_pg3_6

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NRO Points
Pakistan Peoples Party Blog Moderated By Nashia Ahmad Gabol on 10/11/2007 4:00 PM

1.The Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) is the symbol for democracy and civilian rule. The party’s negotiations with General Musharraf are aimed at an orderly transition to democracy.

2.The PPP recognizes that protests in the streets lead to a loss of life, liberty and livelihood even when the protests are peaceful from the viewpoint of pro-democracy activists. We have only used protests as a last option when all other doors are closed. Our goal from the outset is to set the course for a successful transition to democracy and political marginalization of the anti-people and extremist forces.

3. Keeping in view the above, and the interest of the people of Pakistan and the civilized world, the PPP has negotiated with the Musharraf regime the National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO), which has recently been promulgated.

4.The NRO and other public declarations is a broad package of reforms that facilitates the transition to democracy in Pakistan. Its very preamble acknowledges the abuses that have occurred under dictatorship by stating that "it is expedient to promote national reconciliation, foster mutual trust and confidence amongst holders of public office and remove the vestiges of political vendetta and victimization…and to make the electoral process more transparent." Due to the untiring efforts of the PPP towards democracy, the nation has got:

a). A public agreement by General Musharraf before the Supreme Court of Pakistan to resign his position as Chief of Army Staff and to take his oath of office as President, should he be reelected, as a civilian.

b)Part of an important electoral reform demanded by political parties and groups representing the civil society to prevent rigging and vote counting fraud in subsequent election, by amending laws to provide that “after consolidation of results, the Returning Officer shall give to such contesting candidates and their election agents as are present during the consolidation proceedings, a copy of the result of the count notified to the Commission immediately against proper receipt and shall also post a copy thereof to the other candidates and election agents.”

c)Addressing the problem of governmental intimidation undoing the will of the electorate, as was the case in the General Elections of 2002, a Parliamentary Committee on Ethics will be created. The Committee will prevent intimidation of members of the National Assembly and Provincial Assemblies by the government to cross party lines under coercive threat of charges and imprisonment on trumped up political charges as has occurred in the past, most notably in the Assembly elections of 2002. Furthermore, the Parliamentary Committee on Ethics protecting Parliamentarians and thereby ensuring the sanctity of the assembly’s popular mandate, will -- in an extraordinary extension of democracy -- recognize the role in democratic governance of the Opposition. Members of the Committee on Ethics will be chosen on the recommendation of the Leader of the House and Leader of the Opposition, with equal representation from both sides.

d)An agreement by the regime to end unproven from prosecution, against Parliamentarians of all political parties who were “falsely involved for political reasons or though political victimization” during the years prior to 1999 but never convicted. This provision applies to parliamentarians associated with all major political parties in Pakistan, including those from the opposition parties such as PML (N) led by Mr Nawaz Sharif.

5.Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto could have secured an arrangement favorable to herself long ago. Instead she endured exile and a psychological war campaign while her husband suffered eight and a half years in prison courageously refusing a personal arrangement for a political principle (The call to drop politically motivated cases is enshrined in the Charter of Democracy as well as in the resolutions by the Pakistan Bar Association, the Alliance for Restroration to Democracy (ARD) and the major political parties). Mohtarma Bhutto has insisted on measures to prevent political re-engineering through false cases as well as in future to prevent horse-trading. The PPP is committed to fight against corruption through the rule of law.

6.The PPP has upheld its democratic principles in negotiations with the regime. First and above all, it insists on free, fair and transparent elections, supervised by a neutral caretaker government and an independent Election Commission.

7. The PPP continues to insist on a civilian president without uniform, restoration of the balance of powers between president and prime minister and article 58-2(b) of the Constitution enabling the President to undermine the sovereignty of Parliament (which led to the dysfunctional democracy of the nineties), and an end of the military imposed ban on two-term priming ministers from running for a third term.

8.The PPP negotiations are not structured around any “power sharing” concept. The issue of which political party would form the government will be determined only by the people of Pakistan through a fair general elections.

9.The PPP believes that transition to democracy, which begins with the National Reconciliation Ordinance, will take place in a phased manner. Some critical steps have already been taken, like the arrangement for the shedding of military uniform. Other key steps on electoral reform, incorporating the recommendations of The Citizen’s Group on Electoral Politics, which will insure the transparency and sanctity of the forthcoming National Assembly and Provincial Assembly elections are still being discussed

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Interview of Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto
Pakistan Peoples Party Blog Moderated By Nashia Ahmad Gabol on 10/11/2007 4:00 PM

By Karen Yop

1. What do you think of Lt. Gen. Ashfaque Kiani? He's a close ally of Musharraf. Does that bother you?

Ans: Lt General Kiani has a reputation as a professional officer which is what the armed forces and Pakistan need.

2. The army controls everything from arms to businesses and there are those who are supporting extremism and terrorism. How would you be able to handle and control the Army?

Ans: Our first step is to separate the offices of army chief and the President. General Musharaf has now given an undertaking to the SupremeCourt of Pakistan that he will retire as army chief after the presidential elections this October. Under the present military doctored Constitution, the armed forces come under the President. The political parties would need to unite to bring control of the armed forces back to Parliament for reform to take place. PPP has signed a Charter of Democracy calling upon political parties to make the members of the armed forces answerable to Parliament, as they are in Washington, London and France,for greater transparency and accountability.

3. What would be your ideal amendment to the Constitution, if youreturn to power?

Ans: To prevent a return to the dysfunctional democracy of the ninetiesit is important to do away with the powers of the president to dismissan elected parliament in his discretion. Secondly, there are other issues like lifting the military imposed ban on a twice elected prime minister contesting election for a third time for prime minister,appointment of Governors, members of the Judiciary and Election Commission.The Charter of Democracy spells out the changes needed.

4. You've had mentioned about the package deal with Musharraf: balance of power, reforms for a fair election, lifting the ban on atwice-elected prime minister. When do you expect these to happen and how so?

Ans: These issues are part of our negotiations and will happen in aphased manner. Some steps have already been taken like arrangements for shedding military uniform, the counting of ballots, stopping horse trading by preventing arrest of parliamentarians without permission of an Ethics Committee, end to political victimization and national reconciliation. I hope other issues like eligibility of Prime Ministerial candidates and balance of power between parliament and presidency will also beresolved in due course.

5. Elaborate on what does "a power-sharing" deal means? Would this include the Army as well since Musharraf has a hold on them?

Ans: The PPP negotiations are not to share power but to restore democracy through the holding of fair, free and impartial elections where civilians govern and people are the masters of their own destiny.

6. Being in self-exiled for 8 years, what has changed inside on aperson (as a mother and wife) and professional level (as a politician)?

Ans: Adversity has tempered my character. My husband was in jail in Pakistan for 8 years without a conviction and I had to bring up small children as single parent in exile besides looking after my ailing mother.Scores of members of my party were killed. We paid a heavy price for democracy. This experience has strengthened my commitment for building a tolerant society which respects human rights, allows a free media, has a transparent and corruption free government which tackles the social and economic issues of the people, brings peace internally by undermining the forces of extremism and builds peace regionally.

7. How would you run the country now in comparison to your previous tenures? Which issues would you give priority?

Ans: I would seek reconciliation, peace, ending militancy,eradicating poverty, building institutions of civil rule and democracy,spreading education and providing hope to the people of Pakistan for a better future.

8. You mentioned before that you'd better controls in the tribal areas when you were in office. Things have certainly changed during the past years -- 9/11 and the rising inflation rate and terrorism -- in the country. How do you expect to tackle an uphill task after being out ofaction for 8 years?

Ans: The military government has relied solely on the use of force indealing with extremism in the tribal areas. We believe that alongside the use of force, we also need to take political steps and improve the socio economic conditions of the people in the tribal area. Poverty and social isolation also breeds militancy. We will address issues of poverty and social isolation in the tribal areas. My Party has already filed a constitutional petition in the Supreme Court seeking the extension of Political Parties Act to the tribal areas. We want to bring the people of the tribal areas into the twenty first century and make them stakeholders in fighting militancy and extremism. We would interrupt the flow of drug funds that finance militancy as well as spread education and employment.

9. It was understood that you tried to strike a deal with the Army. Howis it going and how would that gel with your deal with Musharraf?

Ans: I am not striking any deal with the Army. I am looking attransition to democracy in which the Parliament is sovereign and the military performs its constitutionally ordained duties.

10. Your take on American funds to Pakistan for the war on terror.Increasingly, there is an anti-American sentiment among Pakistanis because the country's leaders continue to be dictated by the American government. Do you think the country still needs aid to fight terror? What wouldyou have done?

Ans: Terrorism is a threat to the internal unity and integrity of Pakistan. Unless it is eliminated, God forbid, Pakistan could disintegrate and its people suffer bloodshed and civil war. A PPP government will cooperate with the international community in the fight on terror to save Pakistan and bring regional security for a safer world.

For IPS October 06, 2007

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Al Qaeda’s challenge and national politics
Pakistan Peoples Party Blog Moderated By Nashia Ahmad Gabol on 10/8/2007 4:00 PM

Baitullah Mehsud, who pretends to run a Taliban government in South Waziristan but is actually a warlord serving Al Qaeda, has executed three soldiers of the Pakistan army and has vowed to kill more of the 250 he took hostage in September in South Waziristan. The corpses were found with a letter pinned to them saying, “We will gift three bodies every day”. Mehsud has more troops in his custody, including eight officers who might be likewise executed in the days to come.The Pakistan army is fighting a very difficult battle in Waziristan. It is difficult not only because of the terrain and the hostile tribes involved, but because it is backed by dwindling political support in the country. Apart from Ms Benazir Bhutto of the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP), political leaders have avoided a verbal confrontation with Al Qaeda and the Taliban in the Tribal Areas. Their line of argument is that trouble among the tribes is linked to Pakistan’s strategic slavery of the United States, and that trouble will cease once Islamabad’s link with Washington is broken.Not surprisingly, Baitullah Mehsud has threatened suicide attacks against Ms Bhutto, the PPP chairperson, and said that his suicide-bombers are waiting in the wings to “welcome” her when she returns to Pakistan. He said: “We don’t accept President General Musharraf and Benazir Bhutto because they only protect the US interest and see things through its glasses. They’re only acceptable if they wear Pakistani glasses”. He is said to have 35,000 armed men under him and, if he is a Pushtun and an Al Qaeda lieutenant, he will not settle for anything less than capitulation from Islamabad.Most people opposed to the PPP look at Ms Bhutto as a protégée of the United States. Typically in Pakistani politics, public debates are inclined to take no account of the temperament of a political party. This fudging of the ideological distinction is so widespread that many PPP rank and file in Punjab want their leader to switch off the “liberal” character of the party and focus on the illegitimacy of General Musharraf. Yet, if you look at the PPP’s voting pattern on human rights bills in parliament, its liberal credentials seem to outshine the reluctant PMLQ’s performance. Even during its participation at the APDM summit, it accepted reversion to the 1999 version of the Constitution only if the women’s reserved seats and joint electorates were retained.Is Ms Bhutto’s stance fashioned under American diktat and under pressure from General Musharraf who “will save her from going to prison” if she supports him? Most commentators in a highly emotive Pakistani environment will “simplify” the argument by saying she is being led by the nose by US President Bush who wants to save his client in power, General Musharraf, from going under. In this perspective, Ms Bhutto is supposed to have spoken out about the threat of Talibanisation and Al Qaeda, and supported General Musharraf’s action against Lal Masjid, only to earn the pleasure of the United States. But the truth is otherwise.The history of Ms Bhutto’s relationship with Al Qaeda is not new. She has written about it in her book and it is known outside Pakistan that she was an early target of Al Qaeda simply because, being a woman leader, she violated the “Islamic” edict subscribed to by Al Qaeda. Indeed, she revealed some years ago that Osama Bin Laden “contributed” $10 million to the IJI campaign against her. One should also recall that it was during the Afghan jihad and, through it, the rise of Al Qaeda and its creed, that Pakistani clergy reached the dubious consensus that a woman could neither be leader of Muslim men nor a Muslim country’s prime minister. Ms Bhutto was therefore not wrong in assuming that her party as a liberal force in Pakistan did not stand a chance in the midst of this point of view. America or no America, her enemy number one was Al Qaeda and, linked to it, terrorism in general.Baitullah Mehsud and many in Pakistan are perhaps greatly put off by the fact that she has played her cards deftly with President Musharraf, who will now need support from liberal quarters if he has to prevent the Pakistan army from retreating from its job of re-establishing the writ of the state in the Tribal Areas. The PMLQ is not willing to go beyond a certain level of pragmatism to support a campaign against anything that smells of religion. The PPP had the option of joining the rightwing religious consensus in the opposition and then hope to survive after the triumph of Talibanisation. But Ms Bhutto did not take that option and finessed most of the national and international power-brokers into backing her strategy. Therefore, the frightened and confused Pakistani liberal should take heart from her success; so should the myriad PPP rank and file who do not understand the real political contest in Pakistan.
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2007\10\06\story_6-10-2007_pg3_1

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INTERVIEW OF THE WEEK: BENAZIR BHUTTO
Pakistan Peoples Party Blog Moderated By Nashia Ahmad Gabol on 10/6/2007 4:00 PM

“Musharraf Can’t Become President”

For seven long years Benazir Bhutto has been dreaming of returning to Pakistan, the country she has served as prime minister twice. As she began finalising the details of her impending return to her homeland, the excitement was laced with uncertainty. Not surprising, since last week another former prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, who too was on a homecoming after eight years, was bundled from one airplane to another and banished to Jeddah in Saudi Arabia. The Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) leader spoke to INDIA TODAY Editor Prabhu Chawla for Aaj Tak. Excerpts from the interview.
Q. So how do you feel about your impending departure for home?
A. I am very excited. Seven years is a long time and I am wondering what changes have taken place.
Q. What do you expect? A red carpet or the reception that Sharif got?
A. I don’t know how I will be received. But I am not in the same boat as him. He has been convicted by the court of law and sentenced for treason and tax evasion. He had traded his imprisonment for a 10-year exile in Saudi Arabia with his family and this involved foreign guarantees. I was given the same offer. But I refused. So unlike Nawaz Sharif, I cannot be put on a plane and sent out.
Q. But the Government will not allow you also to return as there are charges pending against you.
A. The corruption charges against me have not been withdrawn. As far as I am concerned, I am out on bail and should not be arrested. I stayed out so I would not lose my freedom of expression, freedom of speech, freedom of movement and association.
Q. Is there an agreement with General Musharraf that he would be your presidential choice and you will be his prime minister?
A. The discussion or transition to democracy has not been successful so far. I am going back in an uncertain environment.
Q. Is there any deal with him?
A. Of course not. Please do not use this word. It is unfair to my long history of suffering.
Q. I know you will not admit it but you went to Abu Dhabi to meet him.
A. That was a non-meeting.
Q. Non-meeting or no meeting.
A. Neither side has officially admitted to the meeting. But contacts between the regime and PPP have been taking place since 1999.
Q. General Musharraf’s popularity is on the wane and he needs a civilian face to stay in power. Are you willing to protect him?
A. Whether he needs someone to protect him or not, only he can answer. But the people of Pakistan need someone to fight for their rights.
Q. You are Benazir Bhutto,who is in exile, facing persecution and whose father was executed. Is it right on your part to compromise with someone who has deposed an elected prime minister?
A. I cannot compromise. I am seeking the restoration of democracy.
Q. Prime ministers rarely survive their full term in Pakistan. You yourself were dismissed twice. Is there something wrong with the DNA of Pakistan which makes military rulers throw out elected rulers?
A. I feel very upset to hear that there is something wrong with the DNA of Pakistan. Unfortunately, the military has impeded the democratic growth of Pakistan, unlike in India where you have a democracy and a peaceful transfer of power. India is also emerging as an economic powerhouse and is a force to reckon with on the world stage.
Q. But we have the same blood. We are only divided by geography.
A. Because of the military, Pakistan has not developed institutions or has had a stable environment where growth can take place.
Q. Have you set any pre-conditions for your return to Pakistan?
A. There are no agreements. I am going back unconditionally.
Q. You have been holding talks.
A. Everybody is talking. Sharif has been talking since 2000, otherwise how could he go to Saudi Arabia?
Q. Will you allow Musharraf to continue as President?
A. There has been a dialogue, but there has been no agreement. The dialogue is not about personalities but about holding of free and fair elections to get civilians in power
Q. If Musharraf gives up the uniform, can he be the President?
A. First, this question is premature. Second, it is not for me to choose the President. The people will decide.
Q. Will your party support Musharraf if he stays in uniform?
A. We oppose a unformed presidency.
Q. What comes first? Kashmir or uniform?
A. That’s a good question.
Q. You are dodging the issue.
A. No, I am not. It is not based on one element. If today, for example, Musharraf announces that he will give up the uniform, it doesn’t mean there will be an agreement. Same if he were to lift the ban on twice-elected prime ministers from contesting.
Q. You have not defined the transition of democracy.
A. We are for holding of free and fair elections.
Q. In India, we cannot make a general the President under our Constitution.
A. In your country, you make even a nuclear scientist the President. If we did something like that in Pakistan, there would be utter chaos.
Q. But our nuclear scientists do not sell state secrets abroad. Why don’t you make a rule that prohibits generals from becoming President?
A. I think you are right. In Pakistan, we make rules but the military does not allow us to implement them.
Q. Has Musharraf lost the will of the people?
A. Opinion polls suggest that.
Q. Should he go?
A. This is for the people to decide.
Q. You represent the people, don’t you?
A. I am no Nostradamus. I cannot predict events.
Q. The judiciary has been very active in Pakistan.
A. Yes. Under the restored chief justice. We have great satisfaction that there is a check from the Supreme Court in disputed matters. But there are disputes over everything.
Q. Are you going to be a future prime minister or prisoner?
A. There are questions that don’t have answers. Will elections be held? Will they be free and fair? Will opposition parties get together?
Q. The only permanent answer is that Musharraf will stay.
A. That is also uncertain. The question is if Musharraf is eligible to contest another term in office. According to the Constitution, as a former army chief, there’s a two-year bar on a government servant to contest. So this issue will end up in courts.
Q. So you are saying Musharraf should give up the uniform, the ban on twice-elected prime ministers contesting elections should be lifted and …
A. It is important that all corruption cases against party workers be lifted and immunity be given to them. This is in everyone’s interest.
Q. Do you support Sharif’s deportation?
A. The courts have to rule in this matter. Every citizen has the right to come back. But the other argument is that Sharif traded his rights to live in Pakistan for the dropping of charges against him.
Q. Is your fight against Sharif or Musharraf?
A. My fight is for democracy.
Q. But he has scored a symbolic victory over you.
A. I don’t buy it. Very few people were present at the airport when he arrived. He made a mistake by making a deal, involving foreign parties and so on. But people can review mistakes. And I hope he will.
Q. People say America is playing the intermediary between you and Musharraf.
A. They are going back and forth in Pakistan in the larger interest of the war against terrorism.
Q. Are you not talking to them? Aren’t you the US nominee for the prime ministership of Pakistan?
A. Of course, we have been talking to them. They talk to all parties. This is the nature of political discourse. We welcome their democratic support.
Q. But unlike you, Sharif is clear that he will not talk to a dictator.
A. I disagree, because he did talk.
Q. That was earlier.
A. We are told that he talked. He was supposed to be travelling on Gulf Air earlier, but he went on a state PIA plane later.
Q. Are you saying he had a secret deal with the Government?
A. I don’t know.
Q. Will you become prime minister under Musharraf as President?
A. This will depend on the people of Pakistan if they get to vote in free and fair elections.
Q. Assume that the elections are fair.
A. I can’t do so because of the ground realities. The point is Pakistan is in turmoil because of so many issues and no one knows the course. Things could lead to an emergency, a military rule and deferment of polls. Even the militant hardliners are frightened of democracy. They seem to have adopted a Minus 3 Formula now—first it was opposition to me, then Sharif and now me, Sharif and Musharraf. The hardliners who formed the Mujahideen and became members of the Taliban and Al-Qaeda do not want the people to get back their rights because their agenda will be rolled back.
Q. So for you, restoration of democracy is more important than whether Musharraf stays in power or not.
A. No. For me, the right of the people to choose their leaders is most important.
Q. And is it none of your business whether Musharraf is chosen or not?
A. The question is whether he is eligible or not.
Q. You are also not eligible to become prime minister under the current laws.
A. Yes, but I can contest elections and Parliament can change the law.
Q. But you would like to become prime minister.
A. Yes. If people give me the mandate, it will be a great honour.
Q. In the event of your party coming to power, is your candidature for prime ministership certain?
A. Of course, my party has only one candidate.
Q. So your mission to Pakistan is to return as prime minister and restore democracy.
A. I can sit back and ask why should I take the risk? But I believe every Pakistani has the right to live in Pakistan.
http://www.indiatoday.com/itoday/20070924/index.shtml

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Meanwhile, back in the trenches
Pakistan Peoples Party Blog Moderated By Nashia Ahmad Gabol on 9/29/2007 4:00 PM

By Sherry Rehman

BEHIND the headlines of a presidential election, which has thrust Pakistan into a constitutional and political crisis, the country continues to suffer a deadly challenge to its very survival as a functional state. The growth and resurgence of emboldened extremists continues to form a dangerous backdrop to power jockeying in Islamabad.Afghanistan and Iraq, which were once cited as examples of anarchic implosion, now notch up terror death statistics equal to ours. Suicide bombings and jihadist rage rack up a 100 bodies a month now, while the political centre continues to lose its grip on the country.After Lal Masjid, which festered like an open sore in the heart of the capital, the reaction from the tribal badlands, as they have come to be known, is rocking the ranks of the one institution that was famous for withstanding all such shocks. Yet, very little has been said about the fact that no institution, including the steel-frame of the Pakistan Army, is secure even in their trenches, from such open attack.Even more disturbing is the absence of an institutional response from either General Musharraf or his surrogates in government to the series of abductions of the military’s soldiers and paramilitary forces, which should have sent red-alert signals to all policymakers.Nothing surfaces overnight, particularly messages signed in the language of terror. So why are these abductions or surrenders, whatever they are labelled, so critical to security strategy? What links do they have with the overall state of political instability in the country? And what is the nature of the confrontation, as well as the changing tactics employed by the militants?In order to understand it, let’s just look at the nature of this transmogrifying beast.Firstly, the army abductions are non-discriminatory in nature. They are not restricted to junior level officers. The 19 Frontier Corps militiamen abducted from South Waziristan in August this year, included a senior officer and a political tehsildar. The 280 soldiers abducted late last month included a colonel and nine other officers.Similarly, on Sept 1, another 10 FC Corps, paramilitary soldiers and a major were kidnapped in Fata’s Mohmand agency. These are clear proof of the growing confidence of the militants who now use abduction as an effective way of pressing the regime to submit to their demands.Secondly, the attacks now carry a clear political as well as violent message. The fearlessness of the militants stems from the “success” of the abduction of the FC militiamen in the second week of August. During the time that they held down the soldiers, the militants released a video titled ‘Revenge’, exposing the brutal beheading of one of the abducted soldiers at the hands of a teenaged boy.The video ran a commentary that ended on questions related to the ‘legitimacy’ of the Jamia Hafsa operation, the detention of A.Q. Khan, the Balochistan operation and the forced disappearance of civilians.Thirdly, the attacks now focus increasingly on breaking down the confidence and the resolve of the enemy. If the purpose of the video was to shock the audience, it did the job. According to media reports, it took a small group of Taliban fighters to force a surrender of 280 armed soldiers merely by blocking their convoy.Apparently, not a single bullet was fired by crack soldiers in the world’s sixth largest army. Yet while the much cited Pashtun factor is a serious one, when the pull of blood blocks action on compatriots from a largely Pashtun-Punjabi army, it can never fully account for the loss of will this signifies.Coupled with the recent abductions, the grisly September killings of 15 soldiers in North Waziristan send a deeply troubling message about the perceived morale of the army. It is demoralising in itself that by July this year, the death toll of Pakistani soldiers in the area had reportedly reached 1,000, since 2004 when the campaign to control terrorists’ movement along the Afghan border started. According to independent sources, the figure runs between 1,000 and 3,000, while thousands have been injured.The casualties on the national level are far more shocking. In the last two months alone, Pakistani security forces (military, paramilitary, Rangers and police) have lost 229 personnel in various clashes, and attacks by the militants. As the twin attacks on Rawalpindi, and later Tarbela show, high security zones no longer deter suicide attackers.Fourthly, and equally problematic, is the fact that the militants now operate with clear goals that footprint the pattern of international terrorist missions. To secure the release of 18 abducted soldiers, the militants reportedly extracted the release of 10 suspects who were in government custody. Sources said other demands of the militants included abolition of bunkers and check posts from Shin Ser, Ghut Ser and Nawaz Kot areas.In Fata, too, the demands seek to cut a wide swathe into the heart of the state’s advances and basically expect a return to the Sararogha Agreement of Feb 2005. This seeks general amnesty for Baitullah Mehsud , the removal of army check posts and patrol advances in the Mehsud-dominated area of South Waziristan.Clearly, resurgent militants now feel the state is in retreat, and they are in a position to make short- and long-term demands. It also speaks volumes about their claim on certain areas as pitted stubbornly outside state remit. Until a few years ago, such areas were still under the protection of tribal maliks, but are now infiltrated by the more reactionary Taliban.In areas like Swat, Tank, D.I. Khan, the Taliban started with clampdowns on women, music and culture, yet in all cases the nature of their demands shifted seamlessly from the social to the territorial and political.None of this of course, covers the release of our captured jawans who continue to be held hostage in remote areas by their tribal captors. The information curtain on this episode is very dense, but reports say that after releasing a group of 26, the militants have made the release of the rest conditional on several heavy demands.Here, too, the negotiations run like the demands of one state from another: the withdrawal of troops from ‘their’ areas, the removal of military check posts and the release of 20 colleagues held by law-enforcement agencies on charges of terrorism from various operations.All of the above signals the death rattle of a long, bloody struggle between a regime that is distracted by its own survival stakes, and armed challengers who have grafted a modern terrorist methodology onto a reactionary, dogmatic tribalism. The problem is compounded by the reality that the government has lost its legitimacy as either home-grown or accountable, and has therefore forfeited on the credibility battle so critical for domestic support in such a project.While an elected civilian government will also be challenged with the fallout of long institutional neglect of the issues involved, domestic support will feed the package of development and security responses both needed to deal with such a complex quagmire. Clear policies will send clear signals and elicit better outcomes.The last time the army attacked Fata in 2004, more than 700 soldiers were killed. The attack also left dozens of Pashtun soldiers and Frontier Corps men deserted. A few army helicopter pilots reportedly refused to bomb their own fellow citizens.This shows that the Musharraf regime’s strategy of dealing with tribal discontent and militant ire has not worked for a while. But neither has his strategy of co-opting the JUI, or subverting the spirit of the Constitution, to stay on forever holding all offices. What the Pakistan Army needs is a full-time professional COAS while Pakistan needs a free and fair election where the agencies stay out of the game. Everything will not neatly fall into place, but it will be a start on the right track.

The writer is a member of the National Assembly and Central Information Secretary of the Pakistan People’s
Party.
http://www.dawn.com/2007/09/29/op.htm#3

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Promises in an Orwellian state
Pakistan Peoples Party Blog Moderated By Nashia Ahmad Gabol on 9/28/2007 4:00 PM

By Farhatullah Babar
General Musharraf's promise, this time before the Supreme Court in writing, to doff his uniform soon after his re-election as president from the present Assemblies is an apt occasion to review the promises made in the past and how they were kept. After taking over in October 1999 he titled himself as chief executive. At a press conference soon thereafter, a journalist asked him when he planned to enter the Presidency. Without a moment's hesitation the general retorted that he would never become president. He said that was ready to write there and then that he would not barge into the Presidency. But when on June 20, 2001, he dismissed Rafiq Tarar and assumed the title of president he described it was "one of the most difficult decisions," but completely forgot his pledge not to become president. In early 2002, when rumours of a referendum were doing the rounds, General Musharraf was asked in a press conference whether he, too, like Ayub and Zia before him, would hold a referendum to "legitimise" his rule. No, I will never adopt that route, he thundered. "I am neither Ayub, nor Yahya nor Zia," he yelled at the questioner. But despite his public disavowal, he went ahead with a referendum on April 30, 2002. People were asked if they would like to elect Musharraf for another five years "for the establishment of democracy, end to extremism and to fulfil the vision of the Quaid." If they said "yes" to the stated objectives he would be deemed to have been "elected" even without elections and without any opposition candidate to oppose him. Five years later, and with the benefit of hindsight, he came to regret it. "The whole exercise ended in near-catastrophe," he said in his memoirs. He also said that he realised "in Pakistan, unless there is an opposition candidate that can monitor the process, any opinion poll would end in fiasco." In a claim that would make his predecessors Ayub and Zia turn in their graves, he said the opposition was responsible for the catastrophic referendum. "I later found that this absolutely unwarranted support was helped along by the opposition in certain areas so as to provide supposed evidence for claims of foul play" (In the Line of Fire, page 168). How true that he was neither Ayub nor Yahya nor Zia. General Musharraf's stress on truthfulness, conscience and keeping promises has been saintly. Addressing the nation on Nov. 20, 2002, he recited verse 34 of the Sura "Bani Israil," "Always fulfil your promises. No doubt you will be questioned about them." To reinforce it, he quoted a verse from Sura "Al Maeda," "O Believers, act upon what you say." After employing to dramatic effect the diction of Holy Quran he said, "You can judge how far I have kept my promises. You have to decide whether I have ever told a lie; whether I have gone back on my promise." Then he looked straight into the camera, "Al Hamdo lillah (Thank God) I have always spoken the truth and kept my promise." He knew that people's memory is proverbially short. Who would remember his public pledges neither to become president nor to hold a referendum, he must have thought. On Dec. 24, 2003, after an agreement with the MMA, 160 million Pakistanis watched him looking into their eyes and speaking in a tone that seemed remarkably measured and reassuring: "I have decided that I will remove my uniform by December 2004 and relinquish the office of chief of the army staff." Although some people had advised him not to doff the uniform, he claimed in the speech, he had decided not to heed them because it would be against the spirit of democracy. Then I witnessed him address the joint session of Parliament on Jan. 17, 2004, the first and, unfortunately for him, the last during his eight years. As boos and jeers drowned his speech, he seemed to speak as if in soliloquy. I only recall his raising clenched fists in a show of bravado challenging the MPs before briskly walking away from the House, grimacing and in a huff. From the press reports the next day, however, one learnt that he had also quoted the Quaid-e-Azam, "I assure you that there is nothing more precious in the world than your conscience." For a fleeting moment I recalled the pledge he had made barely three weeks before to doff his uniform by December that year. Juxtaposing it with "nothing more precious than conscience," one felt somewhat reassured, despite a serpent of doubt lurking in the mind. But a year later we watched and heard him on TV on Dec. 30, 2004. "The Constitution allows me to retain both offices until 2007. And I shall never violate the Constitution." There was no value of the promise he had made to the 160 million people, General Musharraf seemed to tell the people on that day because the Constitution, in his view, had given him the right to keep the uniform. After all, the Constitution is the most sacrosanct document that cannot be violated even if it meant breaking a promise. "The uniform was a non-issue," he said in the same address. "Non-issues" must not bother one's conscience, he seemed to assert. I vainly searched the dictionaries to find if there were other meanings of "conscience" which were hitherto unknown to me. The lurking serpent of doubt had finally bitten and poisoned the soul as never before. On Sept. 8 this year, General Musharraf invited the intelligence chief of a very dear and brotherly country to his camp office in Rawalpindi to give us a lecture on the hidden meanings of "conscience" and "promise" that were not to be found in the archaic dictionaries. Waving a bunch of papers at the journalists, the visiting prince declared to stunned journalists that a promise made to a member of the royalty was more sacrosanct than the Constitution of Pakistan or the verdict of its Supreme Court. As the prince was lecturing in a ceremony conducted by the press secretary on the value of promise and conscience, the General must have been within hearing distance. The words "promise" and "conscience" acquire strange meanings in an Orwellian state. That is why people put no trust in them even when they are referred to before the most exalted forum.

The writer is a former senator belonging to the PPP. Email: drkhshan@isb.comsats.net.pk
http://www.thenews.com.pk/arc_news.asp?id=9

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US should refrain helping Musharraf retain power: Schaffer
Pakistan Peoples Party Blog Moderated By Nashia Ahmad Gabol on 9/28/2007 4:00 PM

Siliocn Valley, Sept. 23 (PTI): In order to manage the transition in a post-Musharraf setup and protect America's interest, the United States should refrain from helping Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf to retain his hold on the power, a former US Ambassador has said.
"At some point the pressures in Pakistan will lead to a change in government, and the US will have someone else to work with," a former US ambassador and director of South Asia Program at the Washington- based Center for Strategic & International Studies (CSIS), Teresita Schaffer has said.
"This may take a while, but the trends inexorably point in this direction. If we hold to our present course, the United States will be blamed for the failings of the outgoing regime, as well as for imposing an unpopular government on Pakistan," Schaffer, former US ambassador to Sri Lanka, said in an article for CSIS -- a private institution which focusses on International Public Policy issues.
"The United States needs to manage the transition to an eventual post-Musharraf setup, so as to protect America's enduring interests in this volatile part of the world."
The US, hoping to keep the army general firmly in the saddle and anchored to a moderate partner, backed Musharraf's long-running dialogue with former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, the former ambassador said.
Although some see a Musharraf-Bhutto deal as a transition to democracy but the general's temperament and the logic of his current situation both argue against this, she said.
"Musharraf speaks of 'unity of command' as hallmark of his leadership. That is hard to reconcile with real sharing of power," she said.
"After arresting the leadership of (Nawaz) Sharif's party, would Musharraf and the army allow his other rival to win a major electoral victory?"
The army general has certainly benefited by the divisions among his rival political parties, however, she pointed out that the US will not gain much from its political maneuvering.
"The 'kinder, gentler' government is gone; Musharraf will now rule by more autocratic methods," she said.
"There are ample indications that major demonstrations or a judicial decision invalidating his election in uniform may lead Musharraf to declare the state of emergency Secretary Rice talked him out of a few weeks ago."
Under the current course of the US government, the top American priorities -- Pakistan's participation in US' war against terrorism and its political support in stabilizing Afghanistan -- will become more of a US war from which a new Pakistan government will want to dissociate itself to show country's independence, she said.
The army, she said, will welcome the chance to backout of the "American" operations in the frontier, where they have lost men and prestige.
"Pakistan will be better able to pursue the policies that really matter to us if its leaders are free of the taint of being "Washington's creatures."
Saying that it's not too late for the US to focus on managing the inevitable transition, Schaffer said, "We will of course continue to work closely with Musharraf as long as he is in power. But we should make clear that we will work with anyone who can win a genuinely free election and will fight against terrorists that threaten Pakistan's society."
http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/001200709230921.htm

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Mohtarma Bhutto addresses Middle East Institute in Washington
Pakistan Peoples Party Blog Moderated By Nashia Ahmad Gabol on 9/28/2007 4:00 PM

Mohtarma Bhutto addresses Middle East Institute in Washington Says People do not want repeat of sham 2002 electionsDictatorship fuelling, not containing extremism.

Islamabad, 25 September 2007: “The people of Pakistan want change. Change of systems, change of programs, change from a climate of threat to one of stability and prosperity. They don’t want to see the sham of 2002 repeated again, resulting in an illegitimate government that has no mandate to govern and fails to give security of life or economic growth that can provide hope and opportunity to those unemployed or living on the margins of poverty”, former Prime Minister and Chairperson Pakistan Peoples Party, Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto said this while speaking at the Middle East Institute, in Washington today. A large number of opinion makers, intellectuals, scholars, lecturers and students attended the function. Former US ambassador to Pakistan, Wendy Chamberlain heads the Middle East Institute.

The former Prime Minister giving a detailed account of prevailing situation in Pakistan said, “It is a critical fork in the road between democracy and dictatorship and between moderation and extremism. In its resolution lies not only the future of Pakistan, but also its ability to contain the spread of militancy and extremism which now threatens the territorial integrity of Pakistan. Some argue that extremism can better be confronted by a military backed regime. It will not surprise you that I disagree with this view quite vigorously. I think it is a strategic miscalculation that has had a negative impact in the battle against violent fanaticism, posing grave dangers both to Pakistan and the larger world community. The attacks on the World Trade Towers, the Cole ship at Yemen, the embassies in Africa, the blasts in Bombay and in the Indian Parliament took place when I was in opposition”.

Regarding the military regime’s inability to control the spread of extremism in Pakistan, Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto said, “Large sections of Pakistan’s tribal areas have been ceded to non Pakistanis in the Taliban and Al-Qaeda militias. In fact, after defeat and demoralization following the fall of the Kabul, these violent elements have re-organized themselves under the shadow of the military regime. They attack NATO forces across the border in Afghanistan every day. They conduct suicide attacks within Pakistan killing innocent people. On September 20, 2007, Al – Qaeda declared war on the Pakistan army. Military dictatorship has fueled extremism. A democratically elected government enjoying the support of the people can bring peace to the people of Pakistan and eliminate extremism. Eliminate terrorism by taking extremism off the radar screen of the region. I was the civilian female leader of a democratic Pakistan that invested political capital in the tribal areas that a military regime has failed to control. As Prime Minister I brought the rule of law and the fruits of development to the people in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas. My government broke up the international drug cartel’s militias that have now reasserted themselves under the Musharraf rule and are funding Al – Qaeda to have a narco-fiefdom. My Administration brought the authority of the government and the rule of law to FATA in the 1990s. And we can do it again. I would also add that as Prime Minister I took the necessary steps to close down political madrassas whose curriculum taught hatred and para-military terrorist techniques. I did this before they became a threat to the world community. I considered them a threat to the stability, security and progress of the people of Pakistan. It is only dictatorships which have used the Islamic card to legitimize their rule at the expense of the neglected people of Pakistan. Dictatorships, lacking a popular base, need the religious card, played in one shape or another, to justify their stranglehold on power. They need a crisis to obtain international support, both political and financial. Extremists have never been able to achieve more than 11% of the vote in a free election, and they will do worse, not better if free elections are held today. Dictatorship in Pakistan is not containing extremism, it is fueling. Each of Pakistan’s four military dictatorships has assaulted the major infrastructural building blocks of democracy -- by attempting to marginalize political parties, dismantling NGO’s and undermining civil society, by constraining labor and student unions, and allowing the intelligence agencies and government members to physically assault and intimidate the free press. Each military dictatorship has undermined the independent judiciary by sacking of judges. In the last twenty years, my government is the only one which has neither removed a Chief Justice nor attacked the premises of the Supreme Court.”

Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto expressing grave concerns about the political element in Musharraf’s party that presided over the rise of extremism and said, “Dictatorships, by dismantling the infrastructure of democracy, allow the mosques to become the only outlet of political expression in Pakistan. The Musharraf regime has appointed extremists to head many of the mosques. For example the head cleric of the Red Mosque in Islamabad who led a mutiny in the summer of 2007 was appointed by the regime of General Musharraf. When he was caught smuggling weapons into Islamabad in 2004, he was released by the Minister of Religious Affairs. The same Minister has twice defended suicide attacks before a Pakistani audience while retracting them for the international community. When Pakistanis gather to pray on Friday in the mosques they are often subjected to long lectures by radical clerics appointed by the government even as the government claims publicly to be against extremism. The voices of moderation are exiled or imprisoned. The voices of extremism are protected. Moderate and centrist political parties, thriving human and political rights NGOs, the media, and progressive leadership within our security and intelligence agencies must be brought together to confront extremists who pose the greatest internal threat to Pakistan. This is a battle that can only successfully be waged in a democratic Pakistan by a legitimate government that enjoys the support of the people. This is a battle that I am prepared to wage, to lead and to win.”

Regarding dialogue with General Musharraf, she said, “The goal of my dialogue with Musharraf has never been personal. The goal was always to ensure that there be fair and free elections in Pakistan, pursuant to the Constitution, supervised by a robust team of international monitors and observers, as quickly as possible. My goal was quite literally to save democracy in Pakistan, to give democracy a chance to nurture and grow and strengthen.”

On the issue of presidential election in Pakistan, she said, “Once General Musharraf files his nomination papers, the PPP would decide whether it would resign from the present Parliament or whether it would boycott the elections. While the PPP would not vote for General Musharraf as President from this Parliament unless there is a constitutional amendment, it would not resign if he took the necessary steps to show that he was moving toward fair elections and a level-playing field. If General Musharraf will retire from the post of Army Chief by October 5 - given his pledge to retire before the year’s end; second seek national reconciliation by passing an immunity law for those parliamentarians not proven guilty in the last decade; and third repeal the ban on a twice elected prime minister seeking office — a law that he put into place contrary to the constitution; the PPP will not
resign from the Assemblies. The Pakistan People’s Party is holding a meeting with its ARD allies to decide this issue on October 3. Civil unrest is what the extremists want. Anarchy and chaos suits them. The political element in Musharraf's party that presided over the rise of
extremism has worked with every Pakistani administration since my government was destabilized in 1996.”

About the general elections in Pakistan, Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto said,
“My Party and I seek fair, free and impartial elections to be held by an independent election commission under an interim government of national consensus. We want a level playing field for all candidates and
parties. The Musharraf Election Commission has failed to give civil society and the opposition confidence.”

Regarding her return home from exile, she said, “I chose Karachi as the city to return to because it is the city where the founder of Pakistan rests. Quaid e Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah campaigned to create Pakistan as a democracy where all citizens would be equal irrespective of their race, their religion or their gender. I go to Karachi to rekindle the dream of Quaid e Azam for the people of Pakistan. My father gave his life standing up for Quaid e Azam’s dream of Pakistan. And so Karachi is full of symbolism for me. I do not know what awaits me, personally or politically, once I leave the airport. I pray for the best and prepare for the worst. But in any case, I am going home to fight for the restoration of Pakistan’s place in the community of democratic nations. I do not fear the extremists for I have put my fate in the hands of the people of Pakistan, and my faith in God.”

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The costs of keeping Musharraf
Pakistan Peoples Party Blog Moderated By Nashia Ahmad Gabol on 9/28/2007 4:00 PM

By Amir Mir

Commandos of the elite Special Security Group (SSG) had gathered as usual at the mess of the Tarbela Ghazi army camp, 100 km south of Islamabad. It was the night of September 13, 2007, and nothing was out of place: the officers sat down for their dinner, talking shop and cracking jokes. As the evening progressed, an 18-year-old boy entered the dining hall, mingling with the mess employees. The boy gingerly walked to the middle of the hall. Heads turned at the crazed cry of Allah-o-Akbar. Then came a blinding flash and a deafening bang, followed by three successive explosions as the gas cylinders in the adjoining kitchen also exploded. The pall of smoke soon lifted to reveal headless bodies, torn limbs, a chilling death toll of 22 highly trained commandos of the SSG, to which General Musharraf himself belonged, and which was specially trained by the US Special Forces for carrying out covert operations and counter-terrorism and counter-insurgency operations across Pakistan, especially in the trouble-ridden tribal belt of Pakistan. The suicide bomber’s sister, it was later found by the investigation agencies, was killed during the infamous ‘Operation Silence’ carried out against militants in the Lal Masjid by the Karar Company of the SSG Brigade. Two months before suffering 22 casualties in the Tarbela Ghazi suicide bombing, the elite SSG had lost 10 of its commandos, including a colonel, during an intense week-long gun battle with the fanatic clerics and students of the Lal Masjid and its adjacent Jamia Hafsa religious seminary. The incident is being described by analysts as the biggest single loss suffered by the SSG during peace and war time since the creation of Pakistan. Barring the Balochistan insurgency in the 1970s, Pakistan’s history has never witnessed such a staggering number of security officials slain in such a short span of time as in the tribal areas. After suffering such a huge loss, it is not hard to imagine the disheartening effect on the morale of the elite force commandos, who used to take pride in their association with the SSG. The catastrophe has happened at a time when the country is being ruled by the first commando president – Chief of Army Staff General Pervez Musharraf.These were not the only losses suffered by the once fearless SSG in recent times. It has suffered severe losses in the Waziristan tribal region as well. In the second week of September, at least 15 SSG commandos went missing after being airdropped in the forested Shawal valley in North Waziristan to carry out a military operation against the Islamic militants. Their bodies were eventually retrieved through a prayer-leader in North Waziristan, who urged the militants to hand over the remains of the soldiers to him.The Tarbela Ghazi deadly suicide bombing was not an isolated act of terrorism. From the time Operation Silence was launched against the Lal Masjid (July 3-10) and hailed as a success, the Pakistan Army has been racked by suicide bombings, ambushes and abductions. Glancing at the figures since July 2007, it transpires that 396 people have been killed and 886 others injured between January 1, 2007 and September 15, 2007 in 36 incidents of suicide bombings across Pakistan. Those killed since the launching of the operation include 121 military and paramilitary personnel, 102 policemen and 98 innocent civilians. Between January 1, 2007 and July 3, 2007, before the Lal Masjid operation was launched in Islamabad, 75 people were killed and 201 injured in 12 incidents of suicide bombings across Pakistan. After the launching of the Lal Masjid operation on July 4, a total of 321 people have been killed and 685 others injured in 24 incidents of suicide bombings all over Pakistan.Worryingly, the flurry of attacks on the army is no longer confined to the tribal areas on the Afghan border, where the soldiers and the militants have been battling it out since 2002, but has had its devastating echo in and around Islamabad. For instance, twin suicide attacks on September 4 killed at least 33 in the garrison city of Rawalpindi – the first on a bus belonging to the ISI, the other targeting the car of an army officer. And to think the ISI’s brief is to track and bust terror networks. The spate of attacks on the security forces has greatly demoralised the soldiers, eroded the traditional respect for the army and bolstered the resolve of the Islamic militants. The bloody suicide bombing at the Punjab Regiment’s training ground at Dargai (on November 8, 2006 that killed 42 recruits), the attack by a suicide bomber riding a car near Miranshah in North Waziristan (on July 14, 2007 that killed 26 soldiers), another suicide bomb attack inside the Kohat cantonment mosque (on July 19, 2007 that killed 15 military men), the Kharian Cantonment suicide bombing (on March 29, 2007 that killed three army soldiers), two suicide bombings targeting two military convoys at two different places in North Waziristan (on August 24, 2007 that killed seven soldiers), two more suicide attacks near the GHQ – heart of the Pakistan Army (on September 4, 2007 that killed 33 people and wounded 66, many of them staffers of the ISI), all point to the hard fact that Islamic militants carefully select their targets and do much homework to cause maximum damage to the Pakistan Army.The spate of suicide bombings is still on, with the most recent target being the Tarbela Ghazi headquarters of the quick reaction force of the SSG. That the attack occurred in one of the country’s most secured areas is shocking. Tarbela is a highly sensitive area because of the location of the country’s biggest dam, known as the Tarbela Dam or the National Dam. It was the first ever incident of its kind in Tarbela Ghazi, which is far away from the troubled tribal areas of Waziristan. Amidst all these suicide bombings against the security forces, the militant force of Baitullah Mehsud in South Waziristan on August 27 took hostage around 300 soldiers of the Pakistan Army in the tribal area of Momi Karam, dominated by the Mehsud tribe. The soldiers were travelling in a convoy of trucks when the militants hiding in the surrounding mountains intercepted the fleet near Wana and took them hostage. The troops did not offer resistance when challenged by Mehsud’s men, primarily because of their low morale that is coming under intense scrutiny, though Musharraf has repeatedly claimed that he is defending Pakistan’s vital national interests by battling al Qaeda and the Taliban-linked terrorists. Then there are media reports that hundreds of Pakistani soldiers deployed in the Waziristan tribal region have refused to fight against the militants in the area, saying they do not want to fight against their own people. According to well-placed military sources in Islamabad, those mediating the release of over 300 soldiers of the army, taken hostage by the Mehsud militants in South Waziristan, have said the captured soldiers had actually surrendered voluntarily as they were not ready to fight against their fellow Muslim brothers. Quoting one of the 26 surrendered soldiers from the paramilitary Frontier Corps, who were released by the militants on September 20, a military official was quoted by a foreign news agency as saying that he did not desert the force because he feared death. The report said, “He [the military official] actually did so because he was not sure whether the ongoing fighting in Waziristan was Islamic or not. The man, who refused to serve in the tribal areas, claimed that the same query was haunting many other soldiers and the confusion was stopping them from putting up a tough fight against Islamic militants in the tribal area.” Many retired Pakistani generals have already questioned the will of the soldiers to fight what they believe to be ‘someone else’s war’, chiefly because they are not convinced of fighting against and killing their own people. The morale of the army troops deployed in the tribal areas can further be gauged from the fact that many of them usually avoid wearing military uniforms nowadays in the tough areas of Swat, Tank, Dera Ismail Khan, Mohmand, Bajaur, Mir Ali, Miranshah, etc. After suffering the heaviest casualties ever sustained by the Pakistani security forces during peacetime, many security personnel in the tribal areas have gone on long leaves. With the attacks on the security forces now becoming menacing by the day, it is just a matter of time that anyone, just about anyone, wearing a military uniform will be attacked. These developments must be highly disturbing for the army as an institution, which must realise that the costs of keeping Musharraf in power evidently outweigh the benefits.The writer is the former editor of weekly Independent, currently affiliated with Gulf News and the Spanish News Agency EFE as its Pakistan incharge
http://www.thepost.com.pk/OpinionNews.aspx?dtlid=120509&catid=11

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VIEW:Women and the PPP
Pakistan Peoples Party Blog Moderated By Nashia Ahmad Gabol on 9/26/2007 4:00 PM

By Sherry Rehman
Despite the limited time the PPP governments had, their role in pro-actively pursuing a pro-women agenda is acknowledged even today by independent organisations that work with public sector bodies on gender mainstreaming projectsMs Rafia Zakaria wrote an article called ‘BB and Pakistani women’ (Daily Times, September 8, 2007) which raises some key questions about the prospects of improving women’s lives in case Ms Benazir Bhutto comes back to run the country. This article seeks to address her queries as well as quibbles. While speculation about the future governmental set-up continues, increased media attention coupled with an excessive information camouflage has blurred a number of realities associated with Ms Bhutto and the PPP. Ms Zakaria’s analysis of Ms Bhutto’s agenda for women seems to have fallen victim to the same trend. This view ignores a number of realities that mark Ms Bhutto’s two prime ministerial terms.Anybody who writes about the PPP’s performance in the 1990s should bear in mind three facts. First, Ms Bhutto came to power through the democratic route, and will always choose that path. A democratic system obliges the executive to work together with all other organs of the state while making and implementing decisions. Yet, despite the constraints of a coalition government, it was the PPP under the leadership of Ms Bhutto which introduced the first bill against honour killings in the Senate, only to find it defeated by its own allies.It was the PPP that initiated the process of dismantling the Hudood Ordinances bit by bit, via an executive order as well as acts of parliament in 1996, when whipping was abolished as a punishment and all women booked under the Hudood Ordinances were released and rehabilitated. Ms Bhutto’s government also instituted the National Commission on the Status of Women under Nasir Aslam Zahid, which paved the way for the Hudood Ordinances repeal debate. Second, in 1988, the country was reeling from the autocratic rule of General Zia-ul Haq, who had instituted the worst human rights regime ever experienced by Pakistan. Even in those difficult days, the PPP was at the frontlines of the struggle to reverse the draconian laws introduced by Zia, its membership on the streets swelling the ranks of the new women’s groups that had come up in resistance to the reactionary politics of the General. And, third, it was the PPP again in 2002 that, with the specific backing of Ms Bhutto, introduced the first legislation to completely repeal the Hudood Ordinances. In fact, it was the PPP’s constant pressure through private members’ bills that led to the government finally responding with a Women’s Bill, which again was steered and amended in committee by the PPP. As most will recall, the party made history by voting on issue with the government when all others voted against, while the treasury benches had 44 votes absent. Despite the limited time PPP governments had, their role in pro-actively pursuing a pro-women agenda is acknowledged even today by independent organisations that work with public sector bodies on gender mainstreaming projects. It was Ms Bhutto’s government that set up a Human Rights Ministry to watch and investigate human rights abuses, particularly those against women. In February 1996, in a move acknowledged by all women’s activists in the country, and against a cacophony of strong right-wing pressures, Pakistan ratified the United Nations’ Convention for the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW). This was a major achievement of the PPP government on international covenants related to the rights of women, and to this day is used as a critical benchmark by rights activists when measuring government performance in this area.Much is made today, as it should be, of the paucity of crisis centres for women in Pakistan. The first such centres were established by the PPP government under Ms Bhutto. Legal aid centres and burn units in hospitals were instituted in response to domestic violence complaints for the first time in Pakistan, and as the government was dismissed, a Domestic Violence Bill fell through.Before the government could get dismissed, however, the largest credit programme was established to facilitate easy credit for women, a full-fledged Women’s Bank and the first vocational training programme for women were set up. Targeting public health as a poor woman’s burden, the PPP government set up the largest public sector programme of Lady Health Workers, which established a vast network of 133,000 health practitioners to service rural and urban households in Pakistan, exclusively to cater to women’s health needs as well as to address reproductive health issues. These women health workers today constitute all that is left of Pakistan’s public health sector backbone, and is touted by all governments as Pakistan’s showpiece health programme. This is not all. After the institution of a job quota for women in public service, which was quietly reversed by the current government, women judges were appointed in High Courts and District Courts, and a network of women’s police stations was established.For the nay-sayers who say a female head of government is shackled with the problem of appearing too progressive and ends up with an appeasement agenda, the PPP under Ms Bhutto has never blinked when confronted with women’s issues as sold by the religious right as a private matter. The state intervened in all sectors possible for women and it will again. In Pakistan, even sports and culture are arenas fraught with reactionary discourse. Yet, under the PPP government, a Women’s Sports Board was established to promote women’s participation in sports and prepare Pakistani women athletes for international competitions. The First Islamic Women’s Games were held in Pakistan.Higher political participation for women is credited rightly to the current government, but it was the PPP government which was the first to move an amendment in the constitution for the restoration of women seats in National and Provincial Assemblies when it was dismissed in 1996. The party remains committed to a minimum 33% quota for women in all legislatures. But here is why a civilian, elected government with grassroots support is needed to bring change. The problem is that even piecemeal legal reforms can never really take root in a climate of fear, where the rule of law is every day institutionally subverted by a military dictator. Under democratic dispensations, no matter how dysfunctional they were, no journalists were killed for telling the truth, and no women rape victims were shockingly cast as “opportunists” by the head of state for seeking public sympathy in order to emigrate, as was done in the case of Dr Shazia Khalid. Under the PPP government, no churches could be burned down and no religious minorities persecuted with the kind of impunity we see today. Last but not least, Mukhtaran Mai could never be prevented from leaving the country for a women’s conference. I do hope this would satisfy Ms Zakaria, at least as a good beginning.Sherry Rehman is a Member of the National Assembly, and Central Information Secre