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Bomb blasts hit Bhuttos return to Pakistan
By Peter Symonds
19 October 2007
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Two bomb blasts last night ripped through huge crowds in the
Pakistani city of Karachi gathered to welcome former Prime Minister
Benazir Bhutto, who had just returned after eight years in exile.
Up to 125 people are reported dead and 100 injured, but the
toll could rise as police and rescue workers assess the scene.
Bhutto, who was travelling on top of a specially prepared truck,
escaped unharmed and was immediately taken to her official residence.
Among the dead were supporters of Bhuttos Pakistan Peoples
Party (PPP) as well as police and journalists.
Bhutto landed in Karachi at around 2 p.m. local time from Dubai
and was making her way at snails pace toward the shrine
of Pakistans founder Mohammed Ali Jinnah, where she was
due to give a speech. Some 20,000 police and paramilitary troops,
including snipers and bomb disposal units, had been mobilised
to provide security. An estimated 150,000 to 300,000 people lined
the route. The two bombs detonated shortly after midnight, creating
scenes of panic and chaos.
At this stage, no organisation has claimed responsibility.
At least three groups linked to Al Qaeda and the Taliban were
reportedly threatening to kill Bhutto for supporting for the US
war on terrorism and its occupation of Afghanistan.
Haji Omar, a Taliban commander in Waziristan, told Reuters: She
has an agreement with America. We will carry out attacks on Benazir
Bhutto as we did on General Pervez Musharraf.
Pakistani President Musharraf and the US were both quick to
condemn the bombings. For months, the Bush administration has
been pressing the beleaguered military strongman to reach a power-sharing
deal with Bhutto in order to intensify a security crackdown on
Islamist organisations, particularly in the Pashtun tribal areas,
such as Waziristan, on the Afghan-Pakistani border. Hundreds of
people, including civilians, have died in fierce clashes between
the military and Islamist militants in the border region.
While a formal agreement between Musharraf and Bhutto has not
been announced, there is every sign that a political understanding
brokered by Washington has been reached between the two leaders.
Musharraf promulgated a National Reconciliation Ordinance on October
5 that gave Bhutto immunity from corruption charges brought against
her after she lost power in 1996. In return, her PPP did not join
other opposition parties in opposing Musharrafs sham reelection
as president on October 6.
Bhutto has returned to lead her party in national elections
due to be held in January and become the new prime minister. But
the arrangement with Musharraf is fraught with political and legal
difficulties. Musharrafs own reelection is under challenge,
as the countrys constitution bars the president from also
holding the post of army commander. If the Supreme Court overturns
the election and blocks his installation for a second term on
November 15, Musharraf may impose martial law.
Musharraf, who seized power in a coup in 1999, has been reluctant
to give up control of the army, which is his only real source
of power. He finally agreed to Bhuttos demand that he relinquish
command of the military, but only after he is successfully installed
for a second five-year term as president. Musharraf is unlikely
to accept a purely ceremonial role and is reportedly seeking control
over foreign affairs, defence and internal security in any arrangement
with Bhutto.
For her part, Bhutto faces a series of obstacles to becoming
prime minister for a third term. Not only is the Supreme Court
considering challenges to the National Reconciliation Ordinance
and thus her amnesty, but she must find a way around the constitutions
ban on anyone serving more than two terms as prime minister. Bhutto
also faces concerted opposition from within the military and the
ruling military-sponsored party, the PML (Q), which will inevitably
lose power and privileges in any power-sharing deal.
It cannot be ruled out that embittered elements of the army
and/or PML (Q) were responsible for last nights bombings.
The Pakistani police has been quick to blame terrorists
for the attack and allege that suicide bombers were responsible,
but details of the two blasts are yet to be determined. Significantly
Bhuttos husband Asif Ali Zardari, speaking from Dubai, told
ARYONE World Television: I blame the government for these
blasts. It is the work of the intelligence agencies.
Bhuttos mooted deal with the dictator Musharraf has undermined
her own credibility as a champion of democracy, cut into her popular
standing and generated political ructions inside the PPP. According
to recent polling by the US-based International Republican Institute,
only 28 percent of Pakistanis regard Bhutto as the best leader
for the countrya fall of 4 percent from the last poll. By
contrast, support for Nawaz Sharif, who was ousted as prime minister
by Musharraf in 1999, has jumped by 15 points to 36 percent. Unlike
Bhutto, he has opposed any deal with Musharraf.
The official response to Sharif, who attempted to return last
month from exile in Saudi Arabia, and Bhutto could not have been
more different. In the days before Sharifs arrival in Islamabad,
Pakistani security forces rounded up thousands of activists belonging
to his Pakistan Muslim League (Sharif), including members of parliament,
and surrounded the airport with a heavy cordon of police and soldiers.
In breach of a Supreme Court ruling affirming Sharifs right
to return to Pakistan, he was bundled onto a plane and sent back
to Saudi Arabia.
Bhuttos own attempt at a triumphal return to Pakistan
was an effort to claw back lost political ground. Not only did
she have to counter Sharif, but Bhutto had to deal with memories
of her return from exile in 1986 when 750,000 people turned out
in Lahore to welcome her. Then she had returned to challenge the
military dictator, General Zia ul-Haq, who had executed her father,
the populist Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, in 1979. Now,
Bhutto has returned to closely work with another dictator, Musharraf.
According to the British-based Economist, much of the
fanfare surrounding Bhuttos arrival yesterday was carefully
orchestrated and paid for. If there is no such thing as
a free crowd in Pakistani politics, the one in Karachi was unusually
pricey, the magazine wrote. For over a week thousands
of billboards along the 16 kilometre route that Miss Bhuttos
caravan of democracy was to take had been rented by
PPP supporters to advertise the event. Welcome homeland
Benazir! was a poem emblazoned on one of them.
To import the requisite flag-wavers from the partys
strongholds in rural Sindh and southern Punjab, thousands of buses
were hired. The driver of one parked outside Karachi airport,
Sajjad Hussain, said he had come from Punjab province in a convoy
of 100 buses. A local doctor, who is seeking a PPP ticket in the
election, hired his bus for 75,000 rupees ($1,250). Over 500 buses
were reported to have come laden with Miss Bhuttos hometown
of Larkana, in northern Sindh. Asked who was footing the bill,
the PPPs leader in Sindh, Nisar Ahmed Khuhro, grimaced:
We are, I am, tax-paidwe love it!
This charade underscores just how fragile Pakistani politics
has become. Neither Bhutto, Musharraf nor Sharif has any significant
base of solid political support. Each has presided over growing
social inequality and resorted to anti-democratic methods to retain
power. In one way or another, all have supported the Bush administrations
bogus war on terrorism and the US occupations of Afghanistan
and Iraq, which are deeply unpopular in Pakistan. Right-wing Islamic
fundamentalist parties and organisations have made some gains,
but the far broader wellsprings of popular anger and hostility
find no expression in Pakistans political establishment.
The bomb blasts in Karachi are a reminder that Bhuttos
return, far from bringing peace and democracy, is likely to open
up a new chapter of political crisis and instability.
See Also:
Washington lauds Pakistan's sham presidential
election
[9 October 2007]
Bush, Bhutto accomplices in Pakistans
sham presidential election
[6 October 2007]
With US backing, Musharraf
presses ahead with bogus presidential election
[28September 2007]
Musharraf regime seeks to
stave off collapse
[20 September 2007]
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