Posted on 01/13/2008 2:03:54 AM PST by shhimundercover
'Real' Bhutto heir denounces family business Jeremy Page in Karachi
[IMG]http://i7.photobucket.com/albums/y268/WilliamSchlegel/Fatima360_265512a.jpg[/IMG]
When Fatima Bhutto heard that her estranged aunt had been assassinated she put aside decades of family feuding to mourn with her relatives at the ancestral home in Pakistan.
Three days later, when Benazir Bhuttos 19-year-old son, Bilawal, was anointed head of the Pakistan Peoples Party, Fatima maintained a respectful silence, despite whispers that she was the real Bhutto heir.
But now, two weeks on, she has broken that silence to launch a blistering attack on her cousins appointment, accusing those around him of perpetuating dynastic politics and trying to cash in on his mothers blood.
In an interview with The Times her first with the Western media since Benazirs death the 25-year-old newspaper columnist also rejected her own claim to the Bhutto legacy, calling for a new era of politics based on platforms rather than personalities.
Thats the problem its a field thats held hostage by so few and its become in a sense the family business, like an antique shop, where its just So and So and Sons and then grandsons and great grandsons. It just gets handed down, she said.
The idea that it has to be a Bhutto, I think, is a dangerous one. It doesnt benefit Pakistan. It doesnt benefit a party thats supposed to be run on democratic lines and it doesnt benefit us as citizens if we think only about personalities and not about platforms. At a news conference in London this week, Bilawal denied that the party had been handed to him like some piece of family furniture.
Fatimas remarks are unlikely to dent his support, but they reflect the concerns of many about his partys democratic credentials ahead of parliamentary elections on February 18. And while she says her doors are always open to Bilawal and his sisters, her criticism is almost certain to dash hopes of a family reunion and carry the epic feud into the next generation.
We were there for those three days of mourning, she said. So its up to them now. Fatimas father was Murtaza Bhutto, Benazirs younger brother and the eldest son of Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, who was Pakistans first populist Prime Minister until he was deposed in a coup in 1977 and executed.
Murtaza led a resistance movement from Afghanistan, returning to Pakistan to challenge Benazirs leadership of the PPP. He was killed in a police shootout in Karachi in 1996, while she was Prime Minister. Murtazas Lebanese-Syrian wife, Ghinwa, has always blamed Benazir and has run a splinter faction of the PPP ever since. Benazir, meanwhile, derided Ghinwa as a belly dancer and disputed her inheritance of the family homes in Karachi and Larkana. It was not a pleasant relationship we had at all, Fatima said.
The PPP says that Benazir left a will appointing her husband, Asif Ali Zardari, as party chief and that he stepped down in favour of Bilawal, a history student at Oxford. Bilawal added Bhutto to his surname and said his father would run the party until he completed his studies. Mumtaz Bhutto, leader of the 700,000-strong Bhutto tribe, has disputed that, saying Bilawals name change did not make him a real Bhutto.
Fatima said that neither she nor her 17-year-old brother were the rightful heirs even though they are the offspring of the male line. The issue, she said, was whether Bilawal was a suitable choice, given that by law he must wait another 6 years to run for Parliament and 16 years to stand for Prime Minister. Ultimately the party workers believe that nobody can head the party but a Bhutto, but I dont think the workers believe that on whomever you put the Bhutto name can lead, she said.
They seem to be a party in a hurry and they seem to be desperate to cash in on her blood. There was a certain coterie around her that benefited richly from her Government and they plan, it seems, to benefit richly from her death as well.
Fatima, like Mr Zardari, rejected the Governments claim that Islamist militants were behind Benazirs assassination, but she also questioned Mr Zardaris motives. I think at some point the will should be made public, if indeed there was one, she said.
The parallels between Fatima and her aunt are striking: Benazir studied at Harvard and Oxford before returning to Pakistan and taking over the PPP aged 24. Fatima returned to Pakistan two years ago after completing a BA in Middle Eastern studies at Columbia University and an MA in South Asian government and politics at SOAS in London.
Fatima has also published a book of poetry aged 15 and another on the 2005 earthquake in Kashmir.
So far, she has resisted the urge to run for Parliament, confining herself to campaigning for her mother and writing her weekly columns. She admits, though, that politics is in her blood. If there was an opportunity for new faces to come up and new voices to be heard and if I could be of service in some way, I wouldnt say no, she said. But Im not interested in being a symbol for anyone.
Voice of dissent
[Benazir] Bhuttos political posturing is sheer pantomime . . . By supporting Ms Bhutto, who talks of democracy while asking to be brought to power by a military dictator, the only thing that will be accomplished is the death of the nascent secular democratic movement in my country Opinion piece in the Los Angeles Times November 14, 2007
I never agreed with her politics. I never did. I never agreed with those she kept around her, the political opportunists, hangers-on, them. They repulsed me. I never agreed with her version of events. Never. But in death perhaps, there is a moment to call for calm. To say enough. We have had enough. We cannot, and will not, take any more madness Column in The News, Pakistan December 30, 2007
Also, well educated. Unusually honest media account of what is really going on in Pakistan
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I can’t understand why anyone wanting “democracy” would accept dynastic appointments. Are they not mutually exclusive?
yeah....that would be un-American. It's not like the Kennedy, Bush, Rockefeller, Humphrey, Jackson, Gore and for that matter the women that married Senators or Congressmen that ended up in office.
Heck it's not ...... er, nevermind. Do as we say, not as we do, you stupid 3rd world countries.

It's not who votes that counts...but who counts the votes. = clintonian
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