The Guardian - December 28, 2007
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,2232632,00.html>
 
A tragedy born of military despotism and anarchy
The assassination of Benazir Bhutto heaps despair upon Pakistan. Now  
her party must be democratically rebuilt
 
Tariq Ali
 
Even those of us sharply critical of Benazir Bhutto's behaviour and  
policies - both while she was in office and more recently - are  
stunned and angered by her death. Indignation and fear stalk the  
country once again.
 
An odd coexistence of military despotism and anarchy created the  
conditions leading to her assassination in Rawalpindi yesterday. In  
the past, military rule was designed to preserve order - and did so  
for a few years. No longer. Today it creates disorder and promotes  
lawlessness. How else can one explain the sacking of the chief  
justice and eight other judges of the country's supreme court for  
attempting to hold the government's intelligence agencies and the  
police accountable to courts of law? Their replacements lack the  
backbone to do anything, let alone conduct a proper inquest into the  
misdeeds of the agencies to uncover the truth behind the carefully  
organised killing of a major political leader.
 
How can Pakistan today be anything but a conflagration of despair? It  
is assumed that the killers were jihadi fanatics. This may well be  
true, but were they acting on their own?
 
Benazir, according to those close to her, had been tempted to boycott  
the fake elections, but she lacked the political courage to defy  
Washington. She had plenty of physical courage, and refused to be  
cowed by threats from local opponents. She had been addressing an  
election rally in Liaquat Bagh. This is a popular space named after  
the country's first prime minister, Liaquat Ali Khan, who was killed  
by an assassin in 1953. The killer, Said Akbar, was immediately shot  
dead on the orders of a police officer involved in the plot. Not far  
from here, there once stood a colonial structure where nationalists  
were imprisoned. This was Rawalpindi jail. It was here that Benazir's  
father, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, was hanged in April 1979. The military  
tyrant responsible for his judicial murder made sure the site of the  
tragedy was destroyed as well.
 
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto's death poisoned relations between his Pakistan  
People's party and the army. Party activists, particularly in the  
province of Sind, were brutally tortured, humiliated and, sometimes,  
disappeared or killed.
 
Pakistan's turbulent history, a result of continuous military rule  
and unpopular global alliances, confronts the ruling elite now with  
serious choices. They appear to have no positive aims. The  
overwhelming majority of the country disapproves of the government's  
foreign policy. They are angered by its lack of a serious domestic  
policy except for further enriching a callous and greedy elite that  
includes a swollen, parasitic military. Now they watch helplessly as  
politicians are shot dead in front of them.
 
Benazir had survived the bomb blast yesterday but was felled by  
bullets fired at her car. The assassins, mindful of their failure in  
Karachi a month ago, had taken out a double insurance this time. They  
wanted her dead. It is impossible for even a rigged election to take  
place now. It will have to be postponed, and the military high  
command is no doubt contemplating another dose of army rule if the  
situation gets worse, which could easily happen.
 
What has happened is a multilayered tragedy. It's a tragedy for a  
country on a road to more disasters. Torrents and foaming cataracts  
lie ahead. And it is a personal tragedy. The house of Bhutto has lost  
another member. Father, two sons and now a daughter have all died  
unnatural deaths.
 
I first met Benazir at her father's house in Karachi when she was a  
fun-loving teenager, and later at Oxford. She was not a natural  
politician and had always wanted to be a diplomat, but history and  
personal tragedy pushed in the other direction. Her father's death  
transformed her. She had become a new person, determined to take on  
the military dictator of that time. She had moved to a tiny flat in  
London, where we would endlessly discuss the future of the country.  
She would agree that land reforms, mass education programmes, a  
health service and an independent foreign policy were positive  
constructive aims and crucial if the country was to be saved from the  
vultures in and out of uniform. Her constituency was the poor, and  
she was proud of the fact.
 
She changed again after becoming prime minister. In the early days,  
we would argue and in response to my numerous complaints - all she  
would say was that the world had changed. She couldn't be on the  
"wrong side" of history. And so, like many others, she made her peace  
with Washington. It was this that finally led to the deal with  
Musharraf and her return home after more than a decade in exile. On a  
number of occasions she told me that she did not fear death. It was  
one of the dangers of playing politics in Pakistan.
 
It is difficult to imagine any good coming out of this tragedy, but  
there is one possibility. Pakistan desperately needs a political  
party that can speak for the social needs of a bulk of the people.  
The People's party founded by Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was built by the  
activists of the only popular mass movement the country has known:  
students, peasants and workers who fought for three months in 1968-69  
to topple the country's first military dictator. They saw it as their  
party, and that feeling persists in some parts of the country to this  
day, despite everything.
 
Benazir's horrific death should give her colleagues pause for  
reflection. To be dependent on a person or a family may be necessary  
at certain times, but it is a structural weakness, not a strength for  
a political organisation. The People's party needs to be refounded as  
a modern and democratic organisation, open to honest debate and  
discussion, defending social and human rights, uniting the many  
disparate groups and individuals in Pakistan desperate for any  
halfway decent alternative, and coming forward with concrete  
proposals to stabilise occupied and war-torn Afghanistan. This can  
and should be done. The Bhutto family should not be asked for any  
more sacrifices.
 
ยท Tariq Ali's book The Duel: Pakistan on the Flightpath of American  
Power is published in 2008 

_______________________________________________
Marxism-Thaxis mailing list
Marxism-Thaxis@lists.econ.utah.edu
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism-thaxis

Reply via email to