Pakistan After Benazir: Choosing Our Future

Posted on December 29, 2007
Filed Under >Adil Najam, People, Politics, Society
73 Comments
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Adil Najam

Benazir Bhutto, twice Prime Minister of Pakistan, now lies under six feet of earth in Garhi Khuda Bux, her ancestral village, in a grave next to her equally mercurial father, the late Prime Minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto.

Time line for the Bhutto family

As the graphic above (click to enlarge) from Boston Globe shows, hers – like her father’s – was a brilliant but tragic life. Tragically ended.

Now she is buried. But I suspect that the Benazir saga is far from over. Indeed, just as all of Pakistan’s politics after Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto’s hanging was contextualized by his hanging, all of Pakistan’s politics after Benazir’s assasination is likely to be contextualized by Benazir’s assasination.

In the immediate aftermath of this tragic death, the country continues to reel in grief at what has happened, fear about what might happened, and immense immense anger and everything that has been happening. As I argued in an op-ed in the New York Daily News today, this mix of grief, anger and fear is a very dangerous combination. It cannot lead to any good.

Right now the scenes we see on our screens are of mayhem, of devastation, of further violence, of destruction. These are not good images for Pakistan and certainly these are not the Benazir Bhutto would have wanted as her legacy. We at ATP have written many many times about the climate of anger that defines modern Pakistan (here here, here, here, here, etc.). This anger is the single most disturbing and single most defining motif of today’s Pakistan. Right now – and not without reason – the anger is being directed at Gen. Pervaiz Musharraf’s government. Much of this should, but not in this way.

More important to note is who the anger is not being directed at. I hope that the legacy of Benazir Bhutto’s untimely and tragic death is a legacy of a society that seizes this moment to reassert its demand for democracy and to recognize that extremist violence is our problem. This is not a mercenary war. This is Pakistan’s own battle. Right now the evidence suggests that society continues to tear at its own self. I fear that it will not change anytime soon. That things are likely to get worse before they become any better. But, I refuse to give up hope. At least, not yet.

As I wrote in my New York Daily News op-ed:

If this moment ends up being defined by Pakistan’s latent anger – if it launches a cycle of crackdowns and protests – it will certainly empower and embolden the militants further. But if it is defined by society’s sense of shared loss, felt grief and the continued movement toward genuine democracy, it might – just might – bring together a fractured society and awaken in them the realization that the common enemies are extremism, violence and terrorism. Then, we might just have half a chance of winning this war on terror. And Benazir Bhutto’s death would not have been in vain.

 

73 responses to “Pakistan After Benazir: Choosing Our Future”

  1. Pakphile says:

    I have not seen one of us go beyond the usual stuff. For the life of me, I dont get why even educated Pakistanis can’t delve deep enough. Forever on the surface. Has our native intelligence dimmed so much?
    If I remember right, Benazir and Babar supported the Taliban (its Afghan version) back in the day, they wholeheartedly created the Lashkar and co jihadis and started the jihad in Kashmir in late 80s. Who the …. are today’s domestic jihadis, but a wierd mix of these two, a monster thats turned on its masters ?

    And we still wonder that we are forever in trouble? As someone said here, we think the end justifies the means. We need some serious soul-searching and tough decisions. Otherwise, the downward spiral will continue.

  2. Eidee Man says:

    Okay, Geo just reported that Asif Zardari has said that no name has been mentioned for PPP’s leadership.

  3. zia m says:

    Just heard very disturbing news according to AAJ TV their reporter has seen several hundred cars on fire while travelling on Sukkur Hwy.There is no police,rangers or army personnel in sight.Details still coming in.

  4. Daktar says:

    Bilal, or I guess RE before that, can you please provide source for these numbers. “173 banks torched completely” or “18 railway station burnt completely” do not sound believable.

    There is a lot of destruction going on as people frustrated with the Musharraf years and actions use this tragedy as an excuse to take out their anger, but there is also a lot of propaganda going around, and I wonder about these numbers.

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