Bilawal Zardari Becomes New PPP Chairman and Benazir Bhutto’s Successor

Posted on December 30, 2007
Filed Under >Adil Najam, People, Politics
244 Comments
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Adil Najam

The News is now confirmed. Bilawal Bhutto Zardari has been named the new Chairman of the Pakistan People’s Party. His father, Benazir’s husband, Asif Ali Zardari will be the co-Chairman.

Seemingly credible reports suggest that Bilawal Zardari, Benazir Bhutto’s 19-year old son, now a student at Oxford University, is being considered as the new PPP Chairperson to succeed his mother – and before that his grandmother and grandfather. Later today he will read out a testament from Benazir Bhutto outlining the future of the party.


Repeating what is now being widely reported, but in more detail, a report from Christina Lamb and Dean Nelson of The Times (London) details:

BENAZIR BHUTTOâ’S 19-year-old son Bilawal will be thrust into a dangerous spotlight today as Pakistan’s most powerful political dynasty prepares to pass the baton to the next generation. Bilawal, a first-year undergraduate at Oxford University, is the heir to a blood-soaked legacy. He lost his mother to an assassin on Thursday; his uncles both died in suspicious circumstances; and his grandfather, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, was hanged in 1979 after being deposed from power….

At 3pm today Pakistan time Bilawal will read out his dead mother’s political testament to leaders of the Pakistan People’s party (PPP), which his grandfather founded and the family has always controlled. “They have to show his face to reassure the party that there will be another Bhutto leader in the future,” a diplomat said. Bilawal is expected to play a leading role in the campaign for elections, still scheduled for January 8 despite the riots that have followed the assassination. But he will return to his studies at Christ Church early next year. Under Pakistani law, parliamentary candidates must be at least 25 years old.

Benazir Bhutto wanted Bilawal to complete his education before becoming involved in politics. Although she would have liked him to lead the party, she did not want him to feel compelled to do so or to make the kind of sacrifices that she had to make when her father was executed. Her widowed husband, Asif Ali Zardari, will make a bid today to lead the PPP in order to keep power firmly in the hands of the Bhutto family and to ensure that Bilawal can eventually inherit his mother’s political mantle.

Party leaders grieving for her began discussing the succession last night. The talks took place in Bhutto’s ancestral home at Garhi Khuda Bakhsh, where she was buried on Friday in the mausoleum that she built for her late father. Early this morning 10 villagers were keeping vigil by her grave, reciting the Koran. There were two fresh wreaths from the new army chief General Ashfaq Kayani.

…The prospect of Zardari returning to frontline politics has horrified several members of the PPP central executive, who blame him for embroiling Bhutto’s two short-lived governments in corruption allegations. Zardari became known as Mr Ten Per Cent because of widespread allegations that he received kickbacks on government contracts. Many in the party would prefer to see the PPP taken over by Makhdoom Amin Fahim, head of another feudal family, who ran the party while Bhutto was in exile.

If, indeed, he becomes the Chairman – now or in the near future, nominally or actually – the Bhutto family legacy will continue. While the last name changes – as it did in India when Jawaharlal Nehru’s daughter Indira Gandhi took over – the reins of the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) will remain in the Bhutto clan.

I must confess that my own immediate feelings on this are rather mixed.

I do not think this is a burden (given the weight of the responsibilities or the dangers) to be thrust on one so young. I have never met Bilawal but hear from those who have that he is an impressive young man. I have no doubts that he is but it is neither fair on him nor the party nor the cause of democracy for this to happen at this moment or in this way. More that that, I wish (even though I know it was unlikely) that the Party would open up its leadership and internal democracy process. Also, there is the fear that if he is anointed many will try to manipulate him and he will be turned into a “puppet prince.” I do hope that none of this will happen.

If indeed a role is thrust upon him, even as a figure head whose appointment is meant to hold the party together, this is clearly a big responsibility. It is probably something that he probably anticipated in his future. His mother clearly did. But probably not as soon as this and certainly not in these tragic circumstances.

Whatever happens in the next hours I wish young Bilawal the best. This must be an immensely trying time for him. Whatever happens, I hope and wish and pray that even if he comes to this position because some consider it to be his ‘ancestaral right’ that he will think always of what is good for Pakistan. That he will remember that this is not a privilidge but also a responsibility. There are, of coruse, grave dangers that come with the mantle that some might want him to take on. And I pray earnestly that his fate will not be that of his mother and grandfather.

Finally, no matter what is decided, I pray that he will be guided by the purity, optimism and ideals of youth and not by the self-serving interests of those many who will flood to ‘advise’ him. Leadership is to be judged not only by what leaders do but by who advise they seek and listen to.

My advise to him – not that he asked – is that he should listen always to his heart and mind, well before he listens to anyone around him. Let him be guided by his own idealism, rather than the political ‘pragmatism’ of those who will soon (if they have not already) surround him. Let him follow that which was best in Benazir Bhutto and Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto and avoid their follies.

I wish Bilawal well. But I will wait on my judgement of him, as will history.

[NOTE TO READERS: We had earlier posted a story suggesting that Bilawal Zardari had already been confirmed as the new PPP Chairperson. Realizing that at that point it had not been confirmed, we then took this post off and replaced it with a note of apology saying that this news was not yet confirmed. Given that Bilawal Bhutto as PPP Chairperson was clearly a possibility (either immediately or in the near future) and that a number of still-relevant comments had been made, we then merged the two posts (including relevant comments) but with appropriate changes in the original post to reflect the fact that as of this writing this was a ‘likelihood’ and not a confirmation. It now turns out that our original sources were correct and Bilawal has been named Chairman.]

244 responses to “Bilawal Zardari Becomes New PPP Chairman and Benazir Bhutto’s Successor”

  1. RIZWAN says:

    Funny how supporters of military dictators suddenly cry for democracy!

    Also, can we please have a way of restricting each commentator to only a few comments. At least the comments that are repeated again and again and again like stocking stuffers seemingy to make the discussion sound as if there are lots of comments with a certain view. Its very distressing and time wasting for the rest of us and seems like something that some poor ISI slob was told to do by his bosses.

  2. Ali Raza says:

    “My heart bleeds for Pakistan. It deserves better than this grotesque feudal charade” Tariq Ali

    http://comment.independent.co.uk/commentators/arti cle3295851.ece

  3. Nayab Khan says:

    PPP should be renamed to BHUTO PEOPLES PARTY, a 19 years old boy who smiled with pride when there were slogans of his name, who has burried his mother just a day ago; cannot be a people’s person.

    Nawaz Sharief has also given such an un-responsible statements today.

    The debate on how BB died is not important, she has died in a result of a suicide bomber attack and it is either Al-Qaida, local talibal or militants; Which is the real threat to Pakistan’s stability!! Any government (BPP, PML or Musharraf’s Pupets) will have to fight extremists out of the country first. Non of the political parties (BPP or PML) has the guts to fight these extremists and risk their decrease in popularity.

    I am sorry brothers, with PML or BPP, Pakistan is doomed.

  4. Zebunnisa says:

    Amazing. Its amazing to see the lack of insight into the form and shape of South Asian politics. Yes, it is not the best way, but it cannot be changed in one second. To placate the masses, particularly, this was the wisest of decisions. South Asian countries (at least those from the former subcontinent) have always followed dynastic politics. That by itself needs to change, true, but it is not just the Bhutto house that is dynastic in nature. Unfortunately it is the way we have cultivated politics in our region: dynastic, cult-ish. Give the PPP a break, and read a little more into the decisions taken by them rather than going ona nd on about a “19 year old ruling Pakistan”. Even a 2 year old should be able to see the rationale.

  5. meengla says:

    If a bumbling do-nogooder GW Bush can beat a noble prize winner Gore in the ‘most successful democracy’ in the world, if Rahul Gandhi becomes a top leader of India’s largest, oldest political party, if Jeb Bush can be a candidate in 2012, if….

    These are signs of ‘genetic’ symbolism. We give too much credit to us humans if we think we think rationally or that we should think rationally.

    But get over it! Had PPP appointed Aitzaz–arguably, the best candidate for the topmost slot–then the party would splinter. I don’t think PPP is suicidal! As it is there is a huge struggle against an establishment which has done nothing but hound the ‘security risk’ party of PPP since 1977 and you wise guys want the party to commit hara kiri?!

    Live in a real world. Just because Imran Khan is untainted in your books does not mean that Pakistani masses (I could denigrate them like you as ‘sheeples’ etc but I won’t) are ready to accept him as their leader just yet. Imran Khan’s political acumen is so good that he could be deceived into capturing by some university students!

    What is needed to change the feudal system is to first of all create a mechanism where at least one feudal lord can be replaced with another one–and for that to happen there can never be the military led establishment. That is the first requirement. We may create an imperfect system but nothing stays the same and that too will change for better. But we must establish the supremacy of ballot over bullet first.

    In India we have a more or less dynastic system but at least jackboots don’t determine which of their so-called democrats will rule them. We need that at least.

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