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"Let there arise out of you a band of people inviting to all that is good enjoining what is right and forbidding what is wrong; they are the ones to attain felicity".
(surah Al-Imran,ayat-104)
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User Name: Noman
Full Name: Noman Zafar
User since: 1/Jan/2007
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Two-horse race for Pakistan's hot seat
By Syed Saleem Shahzad

KARACHI - Asif Ali Zardari, the co-chairman of the Pakistan People's Party (PPP), on Friday emerged as one of the cleanest politicians in the country after he was acquitted of all corruption cases against him as a result of a Washington-brokered deal between his slain spouse Benazir Bhutto and President Pervez Musharraf, who signed a National Reconciliation Ordinance to clear all charges against the couple.

Yet Zardari's 11 years in prison still dominate his new role as a kingmaker on the political scene as once-ostracized figures replace reliable politicians of the PPP.

Zardari heads the PPP-led coalition that controls almost two-thirds of the 342-member National Assembly, which was sworn in on Monday, and the party will name its candidate for prime
minister within days.

Washington and the Pakistani establishment and even circles within the PPP are still cautious about Zardari and are weighing up their options for another choice.

The backroom deal struck between Bhutto and Musharraf at Washington's prompting is still intact and US Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte is in talks with both Musharraf and Zardari over its implementation. Nevertheless, whether Zardari, the accidental beneficiary of the deal following Bhutto's assassination last December, is able to lead the party is a serious question after being regarded as a liability in Bhutto's political career.

Even though he has been cleared of all corruption charges dating to Bhutto's two terms in office (1988-1990 and 1993-1996), there are concerns that his record will dog him.

For instance, there are lingering suspicions over Khalid Shehanshah, said to be a kingpin in Karachi's underworld, who was in charge of security for Bhutto when she was killed. In January, Bhutto's chief security advisor, Rehman Malik, addressed these concerns, saying, "Speculation and blame games aimed at me and Khalid Shehanshah are unfounded and our position is clear."

Shehanshah, an American-Pakistani citizen and wanted in connection with several murder cases, became close to Zardari in the early 1990s.

"Asif [Zardari] was arrested for the first time in 1990," a former friend of Shehanshah told Asia Times Online from the United States on condition of anonymity. (In 1990, Zardari was arrested on charges of blackmail, based on allegations that he attached a bomb to a Pakistani businessman, Murtaza Bukhari, and forced him to withdraw money from his bank account. However, the charges were dropped and he was released from prison in 1993 when his wife's PPP took power.

"Khalid Shehanshah was in the US, where he joined hands with some People's Student Federation activists, Salimuddin Salu and Khalid Dalmiya [both were later named, along with Zardari, in a case over the murder of a judge. When the activists returned to Karachi they were killed and the judge murder case was shelved.] Shehanshah held a rally in support of Asif Zardari and had his picture published in various newspapers and when Zardari was released, he soon became Shehanshah's most trusted man," the former friend said.

Shehanshah, who contested the 2002 elections for Parliament from Karachi and lost, has a long police record, starting in 1981 in Karachi over allegations related to theft and robbery and going to a case in 2004 over the murder of Shehzad Ghorewala, a horse race bookie, and another murder. These cases are registered in different police stations and are awaiting trial.

Despite all this, Shehanshah remains Zardari's chief security officer, which is what troubles many in the PPP. As opposed to his Oxford-educated wife, there are even questions about Zardari's educational qualifications, which could prevent him from taking a seat in Parliament.

The 51-year-old Zardari has been quick to sideline Bhutto's trusted aides in the PPP, including Makhdoom Amin Fahim, the party's vice-chairman.

After Bhutto went into self-imposed exile in Dubai in the United Arab Emirates in 1998, the PPP was registered with the Election Commission as the Pakistan People's Party Parliamentarian and Fahim was installed as president.

A personal friend of Musharraf and the most respected Sufi spiritual personality (non-practicing) in the country with about a million disciples, Fahim was furious when he was ignored in the major decision for the PPP to ally with Nawaz Sharif's Pakistan Muslim League to form a government.

Fahim refused to withdraw his bid for the premiership, putting him on a collision course with the billionaire Zardari, and he has initiated high-profile political meetings without the consent of Zardari.

On Monday, Zardari had banners hung outside the Parliament building in Islamabad, labeling Fahim a "traitor". All the same, when Fahim entered the building he was given a standing ovation by many of the PPP faithful.

Zardari, watching from the visitors' gallery, then had the banners removed and invited Fahim for a reconciliatory dinner - the third in a few days, but nothing has been resolved yet.

Negroponte is talking to Zardari, but the US Embassy in Islamabad has opened up a channel with Fahim, as has the Pakistani establishment. Syed Shah Mardan Shah Pir Pagaro, a powerful kingmaker from Sindh province and a self-proclaimed representative of General Headquarters Rawalpindi (the military) has announced his support for Fahim as the next prime minister.

The battlelines are now clearly drawn between traditional political stalwart Fahim and the "street smart" Zardari.

Syed Saleem Shahzad is Asia Times Online's Pakistan Bureau Chief. He can be reached at saleem_shahzad2002@yahoo.com

 Reply:   Momentous day for Pakistan, Bh
Replied by(Noman) Replied on (20/Mar/2008)
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Commentary: Momentous day for Pakistan, Bhutto's legacy

By Asif Ali Zardari

Asif Ali Zardari is the co-chairman of the Pakistan Peoples Party and widower of Pakistan's former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, who was assassinated in Pakistan in December.

art.Zardari.tues.afp.gi.jpg

Asif Ali Zardari says the Pakistan Peoples Party plans to work with fellow democratic parties for a new Pakistan.

(CNN) -- Monday was a momentous day for the people of Pakistan, but a bittersweet day for me.

Sitting in the gallery watching a democratically elected National Assembly headed by the Pakistan Peoples Party and its coalition partners, I thought of the terrible price paid for this moment of liberty. I thought of the many jailed, beaten, tortured, and exiled. I thought of all of those who had their reputations assaulted. I thought of the undermining and dismantling of Pakistani civil society. I thought of the attacks on the independence and autonomy of the judicial system. I thought of the censorship of the press, emergency rule and martial law.

But of course more than anything else, I thought of my beloved wife, Shaheed Mohtrama Benazir Bhutto, who sacrificed her life for her beliefs and her country. This was the day of her triumph, the vindication of her long battle for the restoration of democracy. For my country, this was a day of celebration. But for me and our children, this day was also a day of tears. Democracy had come to Pakistan, but at a terrible, terrible price.

Last week, the two largest political parties in Pakistan agreed to form a coalition government that would restore democracy and bring stability to our country. The Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), which I lead after the assassination of my wife, has joined the Pakistan Muslim League (PML-N), led by former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, to form a broad-based, democratic, liberal government in Pakistan -- an umbrella of reconciliation and consensus. The new prime minister, from the PPP, will be announced within the next few days.

In agreeing to form a coalition government Mr. Sharif and I have responded to the mandate given by the people of Pakistan in the February 18 election. Pakistan's people no longer want to live under the thumb of a dictator. They want an end to terrorism and violence and wish to join the rest of the modern world in the pursuit of peace and prosperity. They want to restore the supremacy of the people's house, the National Assembly, and free it from the sword of Damocles of a marginal presidency with inflated, unconstitutional authority.

Pakistan's political leaders and people have suffered from the politics of personal destruction; we have been battered by dictatorship; we have seen civil society taken apart and a free and independent judiciary destroyed. We have seen international assistance, secured in the name of fighting terrorism, diverted towards making Pakistan's affluent few richer. We have seen progress on education, health and women's rights stopped and reversed. But now, with renewed confidence in democratic parties like the PPP and PML-N, it is time for the rebirth of a democratic, vital and progressive Pakistan.

Some fear a coalition government would lack the necessary strength to tackle Pakistan's myriad problems. But cooperation between the country's biggest political parties, representing an overwhelming majority of the people, would bring greater stability than one-man rule. Together, the PPP and PML-N will be able to build a strong civil society. That would go a long way to erasing the scars of militarism and militancy. We will focus on providing education and employment at the grassroots levels so the country's youth can play an integral role in building a strong national economy.

Under the rule of Pervez Musharraf, extremists were allowed to thrive along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border. The key to improving security there is not to make citizens in Pakistan's tribal areas feel like second-rate citizens kept under lock and key, caught between the threats of violence from militants and the military. Rather, we must let all of our citizens, including those in the Federally Administered Tribal Area, know they are part participants in the growth of Pakistan's economy and civil society.

Fostering a better level of trust and understanding among the people in the border areas, and delivering on their key needs, is essential to enhancing security in the FATA and throughout Pakistan. While immediate steps must be taken to hunt down identified terrorists, the long-term solution to extremism lies in respecting the will of the people and in providing them with a means of livelihood at every level -- food, clothing, shelter, jobs and education. By talking to and respecting our people, we will be able to isolate the extremists and terrorists.

Those of us who are now in a position of leadership seek, in my wife's words, "a tomorrow better than any of the yesterdays we have ever known." We see a Pakistan where all children, regardless of their socio-economic standing or their gender, are guaranteed compulsory and quality primary and secondary education. We see a Pakistani educational system of quality teachers, who receive decent salaries, and teach in modern classrooms with state-of-the-art computers and technology. We see a Pakistan where political madrassas that teach hatred are closed, and educational institutions that focus on science and technology flourish.

The PPP has a vision to build a nation that is one of the great capital markets of the world; a revitalized nation that will generate international investment. We look forward to the complete electrification of all of our villages, the purification of our nation's drinking water, the privatization of the public sector, the expansion of the energy sector, the development of our export industries, the modernization of our ports and the rebuilding our national infrastructure. All of these elements are essential to a Pakistan where a democratically elected government, with the mandate of the people, confronts and marginalizes the forces of extremism and terrorism wherever they may exist in our nation. In other words, I see the Pakistan for which my wife lived and died.

Pakistan's democracy has not evolved over the past 60 years because the generals believed they should intervene in politics and run the country. The army's misperception of itself as the country's only viable institution, and its deep-rooted suspicion of the civilian political process, has prevented democracy from flourishing. The PPP and its allies will reverse the current regime's suppression of civil society and free speech. We will establish a Press Complaints Commission similar to that of the United Kingdom and stand up for the democratic rights of citizens to freely establish television and radio stations, subject to the basic legal framework.

While the tasks ahead are not easy, the Pakistan Peoples Party plans to work in good faith with its fellow democratic parties and our coalition allies to achieve our goal of building a new, progressive Pakistan. Everything will not come at once. The reformation of Pakistan -- politically, economically and socially -- will be a long and complex process. But we are determined to begin and we are determined to succeed.

We did not come this far, we did not sacrifice this much, to fail.


http://us.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/asiapcf/03/18/commentary.zardari/index.html



 
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