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Not Forgotten

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Not Forgotten
By THE NEW YORK TIMES

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Benazir Bhutto in 2007. CreditRuth Fremson/The New York Times

Benazir Bhutto, the Muslim World's First Female Leader
June 21, 2016

Her rosy complexion as a toddler gave her the nickname Pinky. That’s what she was called in convent schools and later in the halls of Oxford and Harvard, where as a student she was a campus tour guide, listened to Carly Simon and looked like Joan Baez.

After graduation, the lyrics from Peter, Paul and Mary’s version of the 1960s song — “I’m leavin’ on a jet plane/Don’t know when I’ll be back again” — were stuck in her head as she boarded a plane for home. She returned 16 years later, in 1989, not as Pinky but as Benazir Bhutto, the new prime minister of Pakistan — the first woman elected to lead an Islamic country.

Her time in office would be as tumultuous as her childhood had been idyllic, ending in her assassination by the Pakistani Taliban on Dec. 27, 2007, just days before general elections, which her populist party was expected to win.

“I didn’t choose this life,” Bhutto said. “It chose me.”

Ms. Bhutto was born on this day in 1953 to a wealthy family whose lands were once so extensive it took days to appraise them. In a country where families dominated business and politics in an almost feudal manner, the Bhuttos seemed destined to rule. As Ms. Bhutto grew up, her father, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, rose in power, from a post in Pakistan’s United Nations delegation to prime minister. He imparted lessons to her along the way.

But her political education went into overdrive when a top army general, Muhammad Zia ul-Haq, overthrew her father and imprisoned him. She was 24. Ms. Bhutto visited him often, absorbing one-on-one political seminars in the grimmest of settings. Her father encouraged her to study other female leaders, including Indira Gandhi and Joan of Arc.

Mr. Bhutto was hanged in 1979, charged with orchestrating the murder of a political rival. Ms. Bhutto was forbidden to attend his funeral.

She and her mother were soon given leadership of her father’s People’s Party. But as the opposition to a military regime, Ms. Bhutto spent half her time in prison or under house arrest, sometimes in solitary confinement.

When the ruling general’s plane mysteriously fell from the sky in 1988, much of the nation rejoiced, and elections were set. Ms. Bhutto seized her moment, campaigned as the “daughter of Pakistan” and, at 35, reclaimed the office of prime minister for her family.

She was elected twice, serving from December 1988 to August 1990 and again from October 1993 to November 1996.

“Charismatic, striking and a canny political operator,” The Times said in an appraisal after her death. “She ruled the party with an iron hand, jealously guarding her position, even while leading the party in absentia for nearly a decade.”

Ms. Bhutto could be imperial in bearing, charming and also ruthless. At one point she ousted her mother from the party’s leadership, provoking the elder Ms. Bhutto to remark, “She talks a lot about democracy, but she’s become a little dictator.”

After accusing her government of corruption, her younger brother Murtaza, a member of the provincial legislature, was gunned down outside his home in a police ambush. Her husband, Asif Ali Zardari, whom she had named minister of investment, was indicted in the murder but exonerated. Witnesses were either arrested, intimidated or killed.

Each of her terms as prime minister ended when she was dismissed by the president on graft charges. When she and her husband left office in 1996, they were worth hundreds of millions of dollars, though the source of their wealth was unclear. Pakistan was named one of the world’s three most corrupt countries.

“In her mind, she was Pakistan, so she could do as she pleased,” her former adviser, Husain Haqqani, said.

Ms. Bhutto spent most of the last nine years of her life in self-imposed exile, much of it in a palatial estate in Dubai. After receiving amnesty on the pending charges, she returned in late 2007 to seek a third term.

A close ally of the Afghan Taliban — which her government supported in its infancy in 1996 — killed her at a rally outside the capital. It happened in a park where Pakistan’s first prime minister was also assassinated, in 1951.

Pakistan still waits today for a real democracy to emerge, and an elected leader from outside the few feudal families that have ruled the country, alternating with the military, since its birth.
 
She capitalised on her father's legacy and she along with her husband made themselves into the most corrupt couple in history of the country. She was total opposite of her father in terms of politics and character. He despite having some negatives, had a strong character, brutal honesty, resolute determination, a nationalist and a patriot. But she did not inherit any of the aforementioned traits, she was all about revenge, to make u-turns on principles to gain power, to accumulate wealth by hook or crook. She will be remembered but not for any right reason but for all the wrong reasons.
 
I don't know much about her because I was too young to understand when she was alive but from what I heard she was extremely ruthless when it came to politics and capitalised on the death of her father to become one of the most loved and hated people in Pakistan's history. The charges against her are astounding but unfortunately can neither be proven or shunned
 
She was NOT Muslim World's ''FIRST'' Female leader. THE IS A LIE!

To mention a few, there are TOO MANY MUSLIM FEMALE LEADERS!

624 Hind al-Hunnud radi’Allahu-Anhur
631-56 'A'ishah Bint Abi Bakr radi’Allahu-Anhur
681 Khanum Pisutu of Uighuristan (Central Asia)
Ca 690-701 Queen Dahlia al-Chain (Berbian tribe in Tunisia)
720-.. Joint Ruler Hababa of Bagdad
734-41 Khatun and Regent Mo-ki-lien of Mong (Mongolia)
Circa 774 Governor Cara Zon of Carcasson (Spain)
775-809 Caliph-Consort Al-Haizuran of Bagdad (Iraq)
908-32 Shaghab of Baghdad
926 Regent Dowager Empress Shulü Hatun of Qidan
950 Queen Yehudit of the Falasha Agaw (Ethiopia)
...
http://www.guide2womenleaders.com/Muslim_Leaders.htm

The rest you can look up in the link above. Just because it was only 100 years ago the Church declared women as ''human''. Islam came to honour women and gave them their Allah given rights.
 
We all question your sanity, but that doesn't stop you from spewing zionist crap, does it?
Sir, I normally take him for the task whenever he is puffing smoke against Islam and Muslims, however this link has some questionable entries....the very first one
"624 Opposition Leader Hind al-Hunnud, Arab World

A member of the Quaish Tribe in the Kingdom of Kindah, she was one of the leaders of the opposition to Muhammed. She led a battle against him in 624, where her father and brother were killed and she then led a battle of vengeance against Muhammed. In the end she submitted to him and became a Muslim convert."
Though she later converted and submitted, her past activity against holy Prophet (ﷺ) should in no way entitle her as a Muslim woman leader. So whoever compiled this list is an utterly ignorant person and has a bias against Islam and Muslims.
 
just you wait
she will be the"yanks" female "leader"
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Trumph may have few words to say about that.


For us lot, we been there and done that, so any among you, before opening their gob about women rights in Pakistan, should think twice.
 
Sir, I normally take him for the task whenever he is puffing smoke against Islam and Muslims, however this link has some questionable entries....the very first one
"624 Opposition Leader Hind al-Hunnud, Arab World

A member of the Quaish Tribe in the Kingdom of Kindah, she was one of the leaders of the opposition to Muhammed. She led a battle against him in 624, where her father and brother were killed and she then led a battle of vengeance against Muhammed. In the end she submitted to him and became a Muslim convert."
Though she later converted and submitted, her past activity against holy Prophet (ﷺ) should in no way entitle her as a Muslim woman leader. So whoever compiled this list is an utterly ignorant person and has a bias against Islam and Muslims.

All you've done is copied from the link that I posted. This is clearly mentioned! And I suggest you talk with respect when you're mentioning a sahabiya radi'Allahu anhur. To answer your statement; just like Khalid ibn Waleed radi'Allahu an, kuniya'saif Allah'.

The point of the article which you have clearly missed is, there were MUSLIM women as leaders. There is an attempt to make OUR women, the honour of our past, the Islamic warriors erased.

I question this "guide" you linked to. For example, Queen Yehudit (Judith) led a Jewish kingdom, not a Muslim one.

Did she accept Islam or not? Stop always trying to attack OUR history. We know our history and don't take it from others. Another example, Umm Salamah; MOTHER OF THE BELIEVERS radi'Allahu anhur was from Jewish ancestry. She was a Muslimah and our leader, hence we call her 'MOTHER OF THE BELIEVERS' as she was the wife of the nabi as'salaathu was'salaam.
 
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Just like Khalid ibn Waleed radi'Allahu an. The point of the article which you have clearly missed is, there were MUSLIM women as leaders. There is an attempt to make OUR women, the honour of our past, the Islamic warriors erased.
Excuse me!!! you have missed the whole thing. Khalid bin Waleed( رضي الله عنه) had skills and bravery but he is respected for his services for Islam and Holy Prophet (ﷺ) after his reversion to Islam not for his past otherwise Abu-jahal would be more respectable since he used to lead the campaigns but he has been eternally cursed and disrespected as abu-jahal (literally the father of ignorance) so I guess you need to learn and use mind before commenting about such a sensitive issues. @Khafee brother what is your opinion about that?
 
Excuse me!!! you have missed the whole thing. Khalid bin Waleed( رضي الله عنه) had skills and bravery but he is respected for his services for Islam and Holy Prophet (ﷺ) after his reversion to Islam not for his past otherwise Abu-jahal would be more respectable since he used to lead the campaigns but he has been eternally cursed and disrespected as abu-jahal (literally the father of ignorance) so I guess you need to learn and use mind before commenting about such a sensitive issues. @Khafee brother what is your opinion about that?

Indeed sensitive issues that destroy a person deeds when ignorant people who have not studied the books of tarika-Al- Islam ledyah ibn Kathir, or the seerah tha nabi as'salaathu was'salaam and critique a sahabiya radi'Allahu anher. Sitting in umreeka and telling me that i need to study Islam. Do you even speak Arabic? I say this without arragance or pride!
 

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