|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Pakistan
Pakistan: Violent state repression of protests over Bhutto
assassination
By Keith Jones
31 December 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf on Saturday ordered the
military and other security forces to take whatever measures were
necessary to quell rioting sparked by last Thursdays assassination
of Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) leader, former prime minister
and current prime ministerial candidate Benazir Bhutto.
Musharraf directed that persons involved in rioting be charged
under Pakistans notorious Anti-Terrorism Act. Military forces
had already been deployed on the streets of major Pakistani cities,
especially in Bhuttos native province of Sindh. On Friday,
the entire country was shut down by a general strike.
Press reports Sunday said the death toll from rioting was at
least 44, but failed to provide a breakdown as to the number of
persons who died at the hands of the police and military.
The rioters targeted business and symbols of the government,
including government buildings, police posts, railway stations
and election commission offices, as well as the offices and homes
of politicians associated with the Pakistan Muslim League (Q),
the military-sponsored, pro-Musharraf party.
Although Bhutto was participating in the national and provincial
assembly elections scheduled for January 8, she had repeatedly
accused the Musharraf regime of preparing to rig the elections
and had pointed to a vast number of irregularities. She had complained
that the local government bodies charged with supervising the
elections remain in the hands of toadies of the military regime.
Most Pakistanis hold Pakistans US-backed military government
responsible for Bhuttos death. If it, or elements in Pakistans
military-intelligence apparatus, did not directly organize the
assassination, they facilitated it by failing to provide Bhutto
with elementary security.
Bhutto herself had repeatedly complained that the government
refused to meet her basic security requests, including the provision
of full security support, armoured vehicles, and bomb-jamming
equipment. She had publicly charged elements in the military-intelligence
apparatus, although not Musharraf himself, with being responsible
for an attempt on her life on October 18 that killed 140 people.
The Washington Post cited a 30-year-old truck driver
as saying of the anti-government protests, These are the
sentiments of the people. This is their natural reaction.
Popular sentiment against the regime has only hardened in recent
days as numerous contradictions have emerged in the governments
account of how Bhutto was assassinated. The Bush administration,
meanwhile, has rallied around Musharraf, absolving the dictator
and Pakistans military-intelligence apparatus of any responsibility
for Bhuttos death. The Pakistani military has been a close
ally of the Pentagon for the past five decades.
Musharrafs government has provided pivotal support to
the US invasion and occupation of Afghanistan and otherwise supported
Washingtons geopolitical aims in Central and South Asia
and the Middle East, earning the military commander who took power
in a 1999 coup the Bush administrations laurels as a key
ally in the war on terror. In recent weeks, Musharraf has
allowed for a contingent of US Special Forces said to be several
hundred strong to begin operating in Pakistan, where they are
to take the leading role in efforts to stamp out support within
Pakistan for those fighting against the US occupation regime in
Afghanistan.
Predictably, the Bush administration and the pliant US media
have taken up the Musharraf regimes refrain that the assassination
was the work solely of Islamicist extremists. This ignores the
decades-long ties between Pakistans military-security apparatus
and radical Islamic fundamentalist groups, including the Taliban
and Al Qaeda, and the intense hostility of the military toward
Bhutto and her PPP.
Benazir Bhuttos father, Zulfikhar Ali Bhutto, who led
Pakistan for six years in the 1970s, was deposed in a military
coup in 1977 and hanged under the US-backed military dictator
General Zia-ul Haq two years later.
When asked on Friday whether Washington would continue to support
Musharraf, US Assistant Secretary of State Richard Boucher made
it clear that withdrawal of US backing was out of the question.
The option is to fight or not to fight terrorism,
he said.
Boucher also took exception to a reporters suggestion
that the Musharraf regime had failed to adequately protect Bhutto.
I think that starts to pre-judge what happened on Thursday,
he said. A Pentagon spokesman took a similar line Saturday, declaring,
I dont know how foolproof you can make any security
when people are willing to kill themselves.
Initial reports, including from the Pakistani government, said
Bhutto, on leaving a campaign rally in Rawalpindi, had been shot
just before a suicide-bomber blew himself up. But on Friday, Interior
Ministry spokesman Brigadier Javed Iqbal Cheema asserted that
Bhutto had not been hit by any bullets. Rather, he said Bhutto
died as a result of hitting her head on a lever on the sun roof
of the car in which she was riding. Bhutto was standing and waving
to PPP supporters when the attack began.
Cheemas claims have been challenged by eye witnesses.
Farooq Naik, Bhuttos principal lawyer and himself a senior
PPP leader, called the government claims baseless
and a pack of lies.
He said, Two bullets hit her, one in the abdomen and
one in the head. Bhuttos personal secretary Neheed Khan
and party official Makhdoom Amin Fahim were in the car and they
saw what happened.
Sherry Rehman, a PPP spokesperson who travelled with Bhutto
to the Rawalpindi hospital where she died, and who later prepared
her body for burial, told Reuters that Bhutto has a bullet
wound at the back of her head on the left side. It came out the
other (side). That was a very large wound, and she bled profusely
through that.
Rehman continued, She was even bleeding while we were
bathing her for the burial. The government is now trying to say
she concussed herself, which is ludicrous. It is really dangerous
nonsense.
The governments version of event is also manifestly at
odds with a videotape shown on Dawn News TV Saturday evening.
Shot by an amateur photographer, the video shows an armed assassin
shooting at Bhutto while she waves to the crowd through the sunroof
of her car. It also clearly shows that Bhutto had disappeared
into the car before the bomb blast, and that there was no security
cordon around her vehicle.
Yet the Musharraf regime is determined to stick with its bizarre
explanation of Bhuttos death. We gave you absolute
facts... corroborated by the doctors report, said
Cheema on Saturday.
According to a New York Times on-line report posted
Sunday, Pakistani and Western security experts... believed
the governments insistence that Ms. Bhutto was not killed
by a bullet was designed to deflect attention from the lack of
government security around her vehicle as she left the park in
the city [Rawalpindi] where the Pakistani Army keeps its headquarters,
and where the powerful Inter Services Intelligence agency has
a strong presence...
But there are other explanations. Shooting a person in a crowdthere
have also been reports of a sniperdemands a higher degree
of skill and training than detonating a suicide bomb. Death by
shooting involves bullets and a murder weapon, both of which may
provide significant clues as to the origins of the assassination
plot.
In this regard, it is also important to note that within minutes
of Bhuttos assassination, authorities ordered the crime
scene hosed down. The water wiped away blood stains and, with
them, potentially crucial DNA evidence that might have identified
the suicide-bomber.
That the government is lying to the Pakistani people is demonstrated
by an open letter issued by Athar Minallah, a member of Rawalpindi
General Hospitals board of directors. Minallah explains
that Dr. Mohammad Mussadiq Khan, a professor of surgery at the
hospital, had determined the evening of Bhuttos death that
its cause was a bullet wound. But he had not put that in his medical
report because, under Pakistani law, only an autopsy can determine
the cause of death. Despite protests from the attending physicians,
Rawalpindi Chief of Police Aziz Saud had refused, however, to
order one.
As for the governments claim that a leader of Pakistans
Taliban, Baitullah Mehsud, masterminded the assassination, it
has been publicly disputed by a spokesman for Mehsud and the authorities
have provided no evidence whatsoever in support of their claim.
Since he humiliated the military last summer by organizing the
capture of 300 Pakistani troops in Waziristan, Mehsud has been
blamed by the government for a series of attacks, including the
October 18 attempt to kill Bhutto.
PPP spokesman Farhatullah Babar said the claim that Mehsud
was the author of Bhuttos murder appears to be a planted
story, an incorrect story, because they want to divert attention.
So full of holes is the Pakistan governments story, the
Bush administration is itself worried that it is fuelling popular
sentiment against the regime and discrediting Musharrafs
American sponsors. A major debate is apparently underway within
the Bush administration as to whether it should urge Islamabad
allow an international investigation of the assassination.
For several days after Bhuttos murder the Bush administration
was insisting that the elections should go ahead as scheduled
on January 8 despite the killing of the most important opposition
leader.
The elections were bogus from the beginning. They were prepared
by a six-week state of emergency during which Musharraf purged
the judiciary so as to remove all legal-constitutional impediments
to his being re-elected as president. Under the emergency decree,
Musharraf ordered thousands of arrests and introduced draconian
censorship laws and restrictions on political activity that remain
in effect.
But to now claim that an election following the assassination
of the chief opposition figure, with the regime itself widely
suspected of complicity, would be an exercise in democracy
is laughable.
It now appears that the Election Commission will decide Monday
to postpone the elections, possibly for up to four months.
For more than a year, the Bush administration has been seeking
to prevent the increasingly unpopular Musharraf regime from unravelling
by erecting a democratic façade. This focused on a push
for a power-sharing deal between Musharraf and Bhutto and her
PPP.
Bhutto, for her part, was more than willing, in return for
a share of the spoils of office, to work with Washington, the
sponsor of a succession of military dictatorships in Pakistan,
and Musharraf, whose government, in addition to throttling the
Pakistani peoples democratic rights, has imposed socially
incendiary neo-liberal polices.
In the wake of Musharrafs emergency and now Bhuttos
assassination, the creation of a democratic fig leaf for Musharrafs
dictatorship remains the Bush administrations policy. According
to an article in Sundays Washington Post, Despite
anxiety among intelligence officials and experts... the administration
is only slightly tweaking a course charted over the past 18 months
to support the creation of a political center revolving around
Musharraf...
Plan A still has to work, said a senior administration
official involved in Pakistan policy. We all have to appeal
to moderate forces to come together and carry the election and
create a more solidly based government, then use that as a platform
to fight the terrorists.
Toward this end, Boucher, US Undersecretary for Political Affairs
Nicolas Burns and other US officials have pressed Pakistans
other major opposition party, the Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz),
to backtrack on the decision it announced in the wake of Bhuttos
assassination to boycott the elections.
According to the Post, the USs other objective
is to prevent the disintegration of the PPP, whose election campaign
revolved entirely around the personal appeal of chairperson
for life Benazir Bhutto and invocations of her martyred
fathers legacy.
Meeting Sunday, the PPP executive chose Benazir Bhuttos
19-year-old son, Bilawal Bhutto, an Oxford university student,
as PPP chairman. Bhuttos husband, Asif Ali Zardari, who
earned the nickname Mr. 10 Percent because of the
kickbacks he extracted while serving as investment minister in
Benazir Bhuttos second cabinet, will serve as PPP co-chair.
The dynastic character of the PPPs succession underscores
the anti-democratic nature of the party. While the PPP has in
the past projected itself as an Islamic socialist party
and today still claims to be the party of Pakistans toilers,
the Bhuttos themselves are one of the great landowning families
of Sindh, whose rural regions are infamous for the feudal-type
oppression that still prevails.
Zardari let it be known that the PPP will still contest the
elections, whenever they are held. Showing that class interests
are thicker than blood, he made an open appeal to the military,
saying that the PPPs struggle is with a section of
people in the government, not the armed forces. He also
denounced those who had raised Sindh separatist slogans at the
funeral of his wife.
See Also:
Bhutto assassination heightens threat
of US intervention in Pakistan
[29 December 2007]
In wake of assassination of Benazir Bhutto,
Bush administration rushes to defense of Musharraf
[28 December 2007]
Pakistans opposition parties capitulate
to Musharraf and Bush
[14 December 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |