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President Asif Ali Zardar - A Profile by Times UK

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He took over his murdered wife’s party and has seen off corruption charges. But will the new president of Pakistan be able to tackle terror?

September 7, 2008 | The Sunday Times

He has served more than 11 years in jail, been charged with corruption and even murder, claimed dementia on one occasion, and is now immune from prosecution in charge of a nuclear state in the frontline of the so-called “war on terror”.

Pakistan’s new president, Asif Ali Zardari, better known as Mr Ten Per Cent - except to those who say it was Thirty Per Cent - is the controversial former playboy and widower of the late Benazir Bhutto on whose support America is now relying against the Taliban.

Despite his legendary love for lucre, a fortune somewhere in the vast playing field between $30m and $1 billion, allegedly acquired illicitly, Zardari has never been convicted of any of the charges against him and insists - against the odds - that he is the man to unify and stabilise Pakistan.

“We are not trying to become a problem for the world. We want to be part of the solution,” he said before elections in February in which his Pakistan People’s party won the largest number of seats in parliament.

Back then, not standing for a seat himself because of his lack of educational qualifications, it seemed unlikely Zardari would hammer together the pact of disparate allies that yesterday put him in the presidency in succession to the ousted former general, Pervez Musharraf. It seemed even less likely back in 1987 when this polo-playing playboy who ran with a gang of well-to-do but not well-connected, fast-car-driving, streetwise wide boys in Karachi was married off to the urbane, Oxford-educated Benazir, scion of a political dynasty.

It was an arranged marriage, thought by some to be demeaning for the Bhutto girl to be “given” to the son of a cinema owner, but it was understood that it was all about her; he was just an adjunct, labelled mostly harmless.

Zardari, however, was not what it said on the label, and there are some who still allege that Bhutto wasn’t either. She swept to power in 1988 and was swept out again two years later on allegations of incompetence and corruption. Most of the charges were directed against Zardari, but Bhutto’s handwriting was also allegedly on Postit notes said to have been attached to official contracts with details of backhanders for deals that included defence, power plants and state industry privatisation.

Zardari was jailed on charges of corruption and embezzlement, but whisked from prison into the office of minister for investment when his wife was reelected in 1993. When her government fell again in 1996, he was rearrested, this time in connection with the murder of his wife’s militant far-left brother Murtaza, who had urged her to purge him from the party. The case was unproven, but a raft of other charges, including money laundering via Swiss banks, kept him locked up until 2004.

The cases rumbled on, with revelations of more than a dozen bank accounts in London and Switzerland, a mansion in Surrey and a string of other properties from the US to France and Dubai. This was at a time his wife was declaring: “How can anyone even think of buying a mansion in England when people in Pakistan have no roof over their head?”

With the trail leading offshore from Liechtenstein to the British Virgin Islands, all the charges have so far run aground for lack of evidence. Judge Lawrence Collins did say that, although there was “no direct evidence”, the government of Pakistan had a “reasonable prospect” of proving corruption in a civil case. To say the least, that is now unlikely to be pursued.

When Zardari, who moved to New York after his release from jail, was called to London in 2006 to give evidence, he provided affidavits from two doctors saying he suffered from dementia, major depressive disorder and posttraumatic stress disorder, even though those who knew him at the time said he appeared in good spirits.

His longtime friend, Wajid Shamsul Hasan, high commissioner to Britain, insists he is now healthy again. Reassuring for a man who has his finger on a nuclear button. Others also less critical of Zardari insist he is simply a man keen to help friends and supporters, accidentally painting a picture of him as not so much the father of his country but its godfather.

His rise to power rests on the “political will” of his late wife, a document he keeps framed above his dining table, urging the party to accept their 19-year-old son Bilawal as her successor, with his father alongside him as mentor and regent. After her death Zardari immediately sidelined the boy, sending him back to resume his studies at Oxford.

Since his party’s electoral success in February, he has in effect been directing the actions of the prime minister, Yousuf Raza Gilani. Earlier this year he allegedly tried to raise the price of wheat for farmers who had supported him in the Punjab. When his finance minister asked where the money would come from, Zardari is supposed to have said: “Print the notes.”

He is also reported to have rejected a new capital gains tax intended to fund income support for Pakistan’s poorest, who live on barely $2 a day, after meeting Karachi stockbrokers.

An attack on Gilani’s car last week will have made Zardari only more aware that if marrying into the Bhutto family elevated him to the heights of power it also put him in the firing line: she and one of her brothers were assassinated, the other died in mysterious circumstances and their father was executed. Zardari claims he has a good idea who killed his wife and believes they will come after him too, though as president his security will be markedly increased. There is no doubting his personal courage. A frequently told anecdote goes back to his days as a young polo player when he leapt from his horse on a riding expedition to rescue the daughter of a German diplomat whose mount was lodged in quicksand.

The worst allegation against him was that in 1990 he strapped a remote-controlled bomb to the leg of a businessman to force him to go into a bank to make a withdrawal. Zardari himself dismisses most of the stories against him as wild accusations by his enemies. A long-term acquaintance adds: “His reputation is such that people can get away with saying all sorts of things about him. But that doesn’t mean they aren’t true.”

Given his past, he is remarkably sensitive to his public image. He reduced his female public relations officer to tears recently after they met tribal leaders in the troublesome northwest provinces, because newspaper photographs showed her and not him.

It is his relations with those tribal leaders - and the Taliban camped out in their midst - that Washington will be more concerned about than all the allegations of corruption. Musharraf tried and failed to walk a knife edge, careful not to antagonise the powerful tribal clans while at the same time accepting billions in aid from Washington for hunting down Islamist extremists in their areas. The current chief of army staff, General Ashfaq Kayani, has said he wants to remove the army from politics, but given that Pakistan has oscillated between military and civilian governments for its entire existence that may not come easily.

Without the army’s backing - and the cooperation of the ISI, Pakistan’s military intelligence agency - the war against the Taliban is hopeless. There are enough Pakistanis, particularly in the tribal borderlands, who feel Musharraf was wrong to get involved in what they see as an American war against Islam.

It is often forgotten that Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan is merely the line drawn by Sir Mortimer Durand, foreign secretary of British India in 1893, and perceived by most local tribes nowadays as an irrelevance. The name Pakistan itself is essentially an Anglophone acronym, the first three letters of which include Afghans between the Punjabis and Kashmiris. It is by no means an exaggeration to say that escalation of the current fighting along the border could threaten the country’s existence. The question is whether Zardari can display the same acumen in that rats’ nest as he has done in his financial dealings.

Larry Goodson, from the US Army War College, has likened Pakistani politics to the film Groundhog Day, where the same unfortunate events are forever repeated in the same sequence. The difference is that in Groundhog Day, the main character learns to repent of his sins and everyone eventually lives happily ever after. For Pakistan a Hollywood ending is not yet on the cards.

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Good to see how much respect Zardari enjoys internationally. :hitwall:
 
president in Pakistan is a symbolic post but in zardari's case he control the PM the (constitunal CEO) through his party chirmanship.

The shameless is now virtual king of Pakistan. Don't forget that he submitted fake educational transcripts for parliamentry elections.

He blamed MQM for the murder of his party activists but today MQM was the only party which earned him Presidency.
 
Most of the times we see that evil is fought with Good, In this case evil has to be fought with Evil.
This word his finger on the Nuke is wrong. Nuke's come directly under Gen Kayni and the security council, Being the president his still doesn't have power over the security council because all 3 armed force have to say yes. Most important Army and PAF have to say yes.
99% people of Pakistan and the world dont know that Nukes come under Composit Force Commander and PAF runs it with the help of civilian like Mr Sumer.
Pm says yes them Army Chief says yes then tell PAF push the button. If you have not noticed please next time see it when ever the Chief of Air staff goes he has an GC who carries a Briefcase. Thats the buttom. Mostly codes. Its like a chain there are only 5 people in Pakistan not naming them have the power to release them if any thing happens to the other 4 the last person is the CFC who will release them. None of them are civilians. If people say this playboy has nukes under him that is totally wrong. BB when alive and in power wanted to see the Installation her request was denied by both forces PAF and Army.
If the Army or the PAF allowes them to see the CFC who is a Air Commodore has the right to say no, If I am not wrong Neo knew the CFC few years ago.
 
All i can God bless our country & safe Zardari from $ which is a strong weakness of his personality.

All poor people must pray to God becoz now this government is absolutely controlled by AZ.
 
Another more optimistic master plan and profile on Zardari and what his potential is by the BBC. Read the emphasized underlined/bolded text:


The 'master plan' to save Pakistan

By Syed Shoaib Hasan
BBC News, Islamabad

Benazir Bhutto and Asif Zardari
Asif Zardari lived in Benazir Bhutto's shadow

The victory of Asif Zardari, husband of assassinated former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, in Pakistan's presidential election represents an extraordinary turnaround for the most mistrusted politician in the country.

As her husband, Mr Zardari lived in Ms Bhutto's shadow.

He proved to be a weak link in her political armour, repeatedly being charged with corruption and earning the infamous nickname, "Mr 10%".

He spent eight long years in jail while Pervez Musharraf was president. He was released in 2004 as part of political haggling between General Musharraf and Ms Bhutto.

Proven wrong

He was thrust into the centre stage after his wife's assassination in December 2007, when he became the de facto leader of their Pakistan People's Party (PPP).


The future could be guaranteed for the next generation of PPP leadership, if we play it right
PPP insider

Voices: Pakistan's presidential race
Q&A: Pakistan presidential poll

Many doubted his ability to lead the country's largest political party. Others simply said it marked the beginning of the end for the PPP.

But thus far Mr Zardari has proven them all wrong.

After the PPP's success in February's elections, Mr Zardari engineered a coalition government that included the PPP's historical rival, the PML-N of former Prime Minster Nawaz Sharif.

Mr Zardari then played a Machiavellian game in which the two men worked to force President Musharraf to resign, rather than risk being impeached.

Nawaz Sharif
Nawaz Sharif could face a long battle with Mr Zardari

Mr Zardari then locked horns with Mr Sharif, refusing to fulfil pledges to restore judges sacked by Mr Musharraf or to reduce the powers of the president.

In fact, Mr Zardari announced that he himself would stand for president, rather than support Mr Sharif's option of supporting a non-partisan person for the post.

As a result, Mr Sharif opted to leave the coalition.

Long-term battle

As long as the remaining parties in the coalition stand firm, Mr Zardari looks certain to win Saturday's election.

However, he could be facing a longer term all-out battle with Mr Sharif, the most popular politician in the country, that many analysts believe could eventually wipe out the PPP.

Asif Zardari
Mr Zardari was nicknamed 'Mr 10%'

However, some Zardari confidantes say he has a grand master plan developed by Benazir.

It starts with a deal with the country's most powerful institution, the army. Mr Zardari's government will protect their interests, taking into account the army's foreign strategic concerns and making sure its share of the national budget is well stocked.

The government will ensure a steady supply of aid and equipment from the US to meet the army's needs to keep up with its giant neighbour, India.

In return, the army will go all out to defeat the militants in Pakistan's tribal areas and keep out of national politics, party insiders say.

The PPP would be able to offer the one thing the United States most wants, all-out war on the Taleban and their al-Qaeda associates using Pakistan's full resources.

For this, the PPP has made it clear to the US and the army that it needs as much power as possible, and that means having PPP people as president and prime minister.

'Future guaranteed'

It also means scrapping any talk of reducing the power of the president. "It would be counter productive to our aims for the future of the party," says a confidante.

Aftermath of attack on army munitions factory, August 2008
Militants have grown more daring over the last two years

So the obvious next question is how the PPP can use all of this to shore up its electoral strength.

"The future could be guaranteed for the next generation of PPP leadership, if we play it right," says a party insider.

This would be done by using the massive aid Pakistan expects to receive in return for its "good performance" in the "war on terror".

The plan would be to spend most of the aid in deeply rural areas where Pakistan's closest political battles are fought - the southern Punjab, eastern North West Frontier Province and northern Sindh province.

The linchpin in the plans is Mr Zardari. "If he can maintain this position and ensure the plan is carried out, Bibi [Ms Bhutto] will have won even in death," a PPP insider says.

The broad outlines of the plan are simple enough. But there are reasons to be sceptical.

In Pakistan, what can go wrong generally does go wrong.

It wasn't that long ago that the then President Musharraf and Benazir Bhutto were working on a grand master plan that fell apart with her assassination.

Mr Zardari's military hopes rest on the assumption - not universally shared - that the army can defeat the Islamist militants, and that it will co-operate with the PPP after years of mutual mistrust.

As far as popular support goes, the PPP has got its work cut out to reverse the country's ever-worsening economic woes.
 
All i can God bless our country & safe Zardari from $ which is a strong weakness of his personality.

All poor people must pray to God becoz now this government is absolutely controlled by AZ.

He is not on top because of his wisdom or deeds. He is their because of horse trading and media support.
His president ship was decided in his meeting with US officials on foreign soil.
He is there for purpose on a mission. He cannot step back from his commitments to indo-us evil designs.
 
. He cannot step back from his commitments to indo-us evil designs.

What is all about Indo here.... You look like deeply affected by conspiracy theories....

Gen Musharraf was best bet for India not Zardari...
 
What is all about Indo here.... You look like deeply affected by conspiracy theories....

Gen Musharraf was best bet for India not Zardari...

Glad you realise that!
President Musharraf was a better bet for the whole world.
Now it is a lost opportunity! india has played great deal of in his ouster by raging havoc in Pakistan through target killings and bomb blasts.
Murder of General Mushtaq Ahmed Baig, Banazir, bomb blast on school van of soldiers children, bomb blast on bus of govt. servants, bomb blast on CIA building Lahore and model town office ........
All this was done in love with Musharraf?
Now Zardari has put Iran gas pipe line on back burner and third class indian buses on his top agenda to take change the direction of love?
 
Glad you realise that!
President Musharraf was a better bet for the whole world.
Now it is a lost opportunity! india has played great deal of in his ouster by raging havoc in Pakistan through target killings and bomb blasts.
Murder of General Mushtaq Ahmed Baig, Banazir, bomb blast on school van of soldiers children, bomb blast on bus of govt. servants, bomb blast on CIA building Lahore and model town office ........
All this was done in love with Musharraf?
Now Zardari has put Iran gas pipe line on back burner and third class indian buses on his top agenda to take change the direction of love?

Hey what ever you are saying is your internal problem and Indian nothing to do. Issue is you do not want to solve this issue but blaiming to other nation, that makes to satisfied and problem keeps persisting. Same I say for Indian's who blaim ISI for many problem, but this only shows weekness to solve our won issues.

And who says Indian buses are third class???? They are best in class... It would be a good decision to import Indian busses than blaiming Indian for all internal problems...
 
And who says Indian buses are third class???? They are best in class... It would be a good decision to import Indian busses than blaiming Indian for all internal problems...

Obviously.. for reasons like above Zardari is more dear than Musharraf who inspired TATA with Lahore Amritsar bus diplomacy. :what:

Are you saying that you have no interest in our internal problems and you just comment for the sake of advise!
 
Well Mr.ashfaque India does play with our internal problems if you haven't noticed I dont want to go into details.
We are only getting those 3rd class buses because of expensive fuel.
 
Hey what ever you are saying is your internal problem and Indian nothing to do. Issue is you do not want to solve this issue but blaiming to other nation, that makes to satisfied and problem keeps persisting. Same I say for Indian's who blaim ISI for many problem, but this only shows weekness to solve our won issues.

Funny how you talk about scapegoating India for our internal problems. Have you noticed what the GoI and Indian public have been doing for the past 6 decades? Blaming Pakistan for all issues.

There is credible evidence of Indian punga in Baluchistan. So while I can agree that both countries use each other as scapegoats for a lot of their internal issues, Balochistan is indeed being used by the Indian intelligence to stir up trouble for GoP.

Bramdagh Bugti (leader of BLA) has been tracked, video taped by Pakistani intelligence in Afghanistan while meeting Afghan and Indian intelligence officials. Go figure that.
 
Funny how you talk about scapegoating India for our internal problems. Have you noticed what the GoI and Indian public have been doing for the past 6 decades? Blaming Pakistan for all issues.

Its not funny... India is doing nothing in Pakistan's internal matter... Secondly Indian leader many time scapegoat ISI for their internal problems... But for many internal problems, like insurgency in J&K and few others, Pakistan has declared policy to destabilize India. PTV arranges programs where people openly talk about supporting many anti-Indian groups to destabilise/break India. Videos are available at youtube, where state sponsored guys talk like mad….

There is credible evidence of Indian punga in Baluchistan. So while I can agree that both countries use each other as scapegoats for a lot of their internal issues, Balochistan is indeed being used by the Indian intelligence to stir up trouble for GoP.

Bramdagh Bugti (leader of BLA) has been tracked, video taped by Pakistani intelligence in Afghanistan while meeting Afghan and Indian intelligence officials. Go figure that.

This is called scapegoating… Why don’t you post that video here??? Its your internal problem, GoP has failed to solve that… Just to divert the attention they are playing blame game.
Finally India is not in Afghanistan to create problem in Pakistan, rather to help Afghan to re-build the nation. So do not create imaginative theories, no one is going to listen….
 
Deleted... Subject Going offtopic

Asfaque sahib you your self just wrote going offtopic and now you are at it again. I agree with you lets stay on the topic.
Thank you :cheers:
mk

To be very honest both Pakistan and India have problems, India is too big so the problem cannot be seen, and both countries use there influence on different parties or group of people to destabilize different parts of the country. I am glad that there are people like yourself who see things the way we do.:tup:
 

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