What's new

Now Benazir will return

EagleEyes

PDF THINK TANK: CONSULTANT
Joined
Oct 3, 2005
Messages
16,773
Reaction score
25
Country
Pakistan
Location
United States
Now Benazir will return

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan, Sept. 14 -- Former prime minister Benazir Bhutto will end eight years of exile Oct. 18 by flying home to Karachi, the nation's largest city, her party announced Friday, although it remains unclear whether she will come back as friend or foe of the president, Gen. Pervez Musharraf.

The announcement, made simultaneously in cities across Pakistan, was greeted in Islamabad by fireworks, showers of rose petals and canned confetti, and chants of "Long live Bhutto!" from supporters of her Pakistan People's Party at a raucous news conference.

Benazir Bhutto, chairperson of the opposition Pakistan People's Party (PPP) and former prime minister of Pakistan, speaks on "The Future of Pakistan" at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London in this July 20, 2007 file photo. (Irina Kalashnikova - AP)

"She will reenter Pakistan to a historic welcome," party spokeswoman Sherry Rehman said. "We expect to govern Pakistan if there's a free and fair election. And we expect her to lead Pakistan out of the chaos and darkness."

The party said Bhutto would fly from either London or the United Arab Emirates, where she has spent much of her time in exile, to Karachi, the southern port city that has been her political base.

But amid the fanfare and bold predictions, deep uncertainty persists over exactly how Bhutto, 54, will be treated by the government when she returns and what sort of reaction she will receive from the public.

With elections looming, Musharraf and Bhutto have been locked in intense negotiations over a possible power-sharing deal that would help him secure another term and give her a chance to win back her old job.

Bhutto said in an interview Friday evening that she would return regardless of whether she can reach a compromise with Musharraf. "My decision to come back is independent of any talks we are having with the regime," Bhutto said.

The two sides were believed to be close to signing an agreement at the end of last month, but the talks stalled, and major roadblocks now stand in the way. Bhutto and Musharraf have long been bitter rivals, and the mutual mistrust runs deep.

Nonetheless, they might need each other.

If Bhutto reaches a deal with the government, she would probably face little resistance in coming back, unlike fellow former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, who was deported Monday when he tried to return. Sharif had made clear he would not compromise with the government and intended to try to oust Musharraf from office.

If the talks between Bhutto and the government collapse, she could be arrested and forced to stand trial on corruption charges stemming from her two terms as prime minister in the 1980s and '90s.

"She will be dealt with according to the law of the land. If there's any case, she will have to face that case," Information Minister Mohammed Ali Durrani said. However, Durrani also sounded a conciliatory note, saying the government expects that "something positive" will soon come out of the negotiations with Bhutto.


Musharraf might need Bhutto's help if he wants to hold on to power.

Presidential elections are due by Oct. 15, and although Musharraf has said he intends to run for another five-year term, his opponents have challenged his eligibility in the courts. The Supreme Court could disqualify him as early as next week because of his other job as army chief.

Benazir Bhutto, chairperson of the opposition Pakistan People's Party (PPP) and former prime minister of Pakistan, speaks on "The Future of Pakistan" at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London in this July 20, 2007 file photo. (Irina Kalashnikova - AP)

If Musharraf is able to close the deal with Bhutto, however, he might get an exemption that would give him a way around the Supreme Court.

The talks carry significant political risk for both sides. Some of Musharraf's advisers have urged him to declare emergency rule rather than agree to a deal with Bhutto.

"There's a group of people around General Musharraf who are fearful of democracy, who don't want democracy and who have tried to sabotage" the negotiations, Bhutto said.

Bhutto's own party, meanwhile, is split over the prospect of an agreement that could help Musharraf at a time when his popularity is sagging and the law seems to be against him.

The Pakistan People's Party is the nation's largest, and Bhutto remains popular, although some of the party's leaders worry that her public standing will be hurt if she associates herself with Musharraf. A recent opinion poll conducted by the U.S.-based bipartisan group Terror Free Tomorrow found that 38 percent of Pakistanis have a favorable view of Musharraf, compared with 63 percent for Bhutto.

The United States has been quietly pushing the deal, hoping that an alliance of moderate leaders could help in the battle against a growing Islamic insurgency in Pakistan that has intensified its attacks in recent months.

Bhutto Discloses Date for Return to Pakistan - washingtonpost.com
 
Lets see. How stupid can our politicians be? How the heck would she be able to run 3 times, when the constitution limits so. She has the same corruption charges, and must be arrested, but would the government would have enough guts so? Black coats are the major supporters of this party, after the chief justice was ousted! I consider her return more dangrous for the stability of Pakistan than that of Nawaz. Will she be treated same?
 
Musharraf set to do a Lalu on Pakistan-The United States-World-The Times of India

Military ruler Pervez Musharraf is all set to do a Lalu on the hapless nation, foisting his wife Sehba as a proxy presidential candidate to get around the constitutional and judicial hurdles he faces.

Under a formula hammered out under Uncle Sam's watchful eyes, Sehba Musharraf will be a cover candidate for Musharraf in the upcoming Presidential poll, with or without Benazir Bhutto running for Prime Minister.

if what this report says is true, which is becoming a real possibility, let me just that there is always a role for "super-pm/super-president" like india's sonia gandhi.

this will definitely help musharraf, bhutto or sharif jumping through all the legal hoops.
 
bhangra,

IF they want to win, they MUST be in Pakistan. Otherwise, people sees no hope for them.
 
bhangra,

IF they want to win, they MUST be in Pakistan. Otherwise, people sees no hope for them.

To be frank with you, I have zero idea of the popular pulse of pakistan people. I guess the dice will be thrown between bhutto(PPP), sharif(PML) or musharaff.

Musharraf officially cant be part of any party. So he will have to stand by PML(Q)/MQM.

Who do you feel will win assuming a free and fair election?
I heard that bhutto has quite a stable following. Sharif must have gained some sympathy with the recent show and he will be on the right side of judiciary too.
PML(Q) is a motley group with no stable leaders/followers. MQM, is good in some pockets, but these two parties, can they win without support from intelligence/ bureocracy?
 
Moderates want Musharraf to be in power. (MQM, PMLQ)

Extremists want Mullah parties to be in power. (MMA)

Those against the idea of War on Terror (literate citizens) will vote for Benazir.

Nawaz can stay in Saudi Arabia for 3 more years until he gets more hair on the head.
 
Interesting latest development is that Government and preferbly MQM has welcomed Benazir Bhutto on her return. Which is quite surprising!

The government says they are ready to compete in the election with her, yet Benazir Bhutto has to fight off the cases in court which she is accountable for.
 
Moderates want Musharraf to be in power. (MQM, PMLQ)

Extremists want Mullah parties to be in power. (MMA)

Those against the idea of War on Terror (literate citizens) will vote for Benazir.

Nawaz can stay in Saudi Arabia for 3 more years until he gets more hair on the head.

Roughly can you be an "pollster" and give the number of seats out of hundred which they can win, for me to relatively guage how much is the ability.

By the way isnt MQM a mohajir party of karachi with its head in London.
 
By the way isnt MQM a mohajir party of karachi with its head in London.

Yup. But difference of influence between these leaders is way far!
 
Just came to notice this.
PML- head in Soudi
PPP- head in west
MQM- head in london
PMLQ- no real head

With all the four major parties having no real head, Pakistan's parties are truly unnatural.
 
Musharraf set to do a Lalu on Pakistan

WASHINGTON: Lalu Prasad Yadav's wild popularity in Pakistan is the stuff of political lore, but Pakistanis might not have bargained for the Bihari leader's buccaneering brand of proxy politics at home.

Military ruler Pervez Musharraf is all set to do a Lalu on the hapless nation, foisting his wife Sehba as a proxy presidential candidate to get around the constitutional and judicial hurdles he faces.

Under a formula hammered out under Uncle Sam's watchful eyes, Sehba Musharraf will be a cover candidate for Musharraf in the upcoming Presidential poll, with or without Benazir Bhutto running for Prime Minister.

The military government will also allow exiled prime minister Nawaz Sharief's wife Kulsoom Nawaz to return to Pakistan and run for election if she wishes maintaining that she is not bound by the exile arrangement that has kept her husband and his brother out of the country.

That would give the exercise a modicum of respectability, while promoting the image of Pakistan as a moderate Islamic society that allows women a role in the affairs of the state.

It will also mean Pakistan emulating Bangladesh, where two women -- Begum Hasina Sheikh and Begum Khaleda Zia -- have been locked in a familial power struggle for more than a decade.

The family project -- which will come into effect only if Musharraf himself is unable to get elected --has the imprimatur of the U.S which wants a firm handle on what is now acknowledged as the world's most dangerous and unstable state without having to deal with the uncertainties of democracy.

While Musharraf will continue to be the power behind the Sehba-Benazir dispensation which is in the offing, the power behind Musharraf will be the United States, which incidentally is home to Musharraf's son Bilal, who recently graduated from Stanford, and his brother Naveed, who lives in Chicago.

The mastermind of this Made-in-USA arrangement is said to be former intelligence czar and Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte, who is credited with managing delicate regime changes in Latin America.

Negroponte and his state department colleague, Assistant Secretary of State Richard Boucher, were very much in the picture in Islamabad when the Musharraf regime forcibly deported Nawaz Sharief with help from Bush ally, the House of Saud, in contravention of a Supreme Court ruling.

Washington has repeatedly winked at Musharraf's political, constitutional and judicial transgressions, describing them as Pakistan internal matter, while paying lip service to democracy and free elections.

In effect, while Musharraf does a Lalu on his country, Negroponte is doing a Honduras on Pakistan.

As the US ambassador to Honduras from 1981 to 1985, Negroponte propped up a military government led by Policarpo Paz García as a bulwark against the leftist Sandinista government of Nicaragua, which had close ties to both Cuba and the Soviet Union.

Political crackdowns and human rights exercise by the Garcia regime reported in the U.S media and observed by American lawmakers and activists were glossed over in Washington's ''larger'' interests, an argument that is being advanced in the Pakistan's case too vis-a-vis the war on terror.

Musharraf set to do a Lalu on Pakistan-The United States-World-The Times of India
 
PMLQ- no real head

I will disagree with this one. The head is right here, The President.
 
That's a brilliant idea! More emulating the Clintons if you ask me. This was suggested in Bill's exit year.

But I've never heard of this before and seems like a Times of India suggestion. It seems good, plausible and most of all would be completely legitimate.
 
^ And i agree. :)
 
I will disagree with this one. The head is right here, The President.

who cant be the head officially- he is a public servant(army chief) and so cant be officially head of it. Yes, he is the prime mover of the party. PMLQ is maintained as a unit only due to the armys overarching influence, once this is removed, you can probably count the number of people in it. It is an unnatural party brought together by breaking the fence sitters in PML and PPP.
 
Back
Top Bottom