Editor's Blog


Sam Diener, editor of Peacework Magazine, muses on global thought and local action. He will also highlight the online musings of the authors of Peacework Magazine. Please read the guidelines of Peacework's blogs and forums to participate in the discussion.

The assassination of Benazir Bhutto and the murder of tens of her supporters yesterday is another devastating blow against the struggle to democratize and promote human rights in Pakistan.

It is not that Bhutto was an admirable Prime Minister. She did little to support women's rights while she was in office, for example. Her tacit support for the Taliban, at US urging, and continued development of nuclear weapons, echoes tragically down the years. Her husband, Asif Ali Zardari, appointed investment minister by Benazir Bhutto, apparently procured hundreds of millions of dollars in bribes while they were in office. On the positive side, while first in office, she did try to prevent the first Gulf War.

Princeton Professor Zia Mian notes in Peacework that Benazir Bhutto made a suspicious deal with Musharraf to drop the corruption charges against her, which enabled her to return to the country in October 2007. Despite all these other concerns, the Pakistani feminist activist Abira Ashfaq argued in Peacework that Benazir Bhutto represented the best chance of uniting opposition against both dictatorial and fundamentalist militarism.

Thus, her assassination and the killing of her supporters, in addition to being a misogynist killing, is a grave setback for a democratic opposition already battered by Musharraf's dictatorship and militants' attacks. In response, CODEPINK has initiated a petition calling for a suspension of all US governmental assistance to the Musharraf regime, and asked people in the US to call the State Department. I think the two main questions now are, might it be possible for outraged Pakistanis to channel their outrage into nonviolent resistance against the Musharraf regime? And will those of us outside of Pakistan step up our pressure on our governments to stop propping up his dictatorship?

While JFK violated his own dictum by laying the groundwork for death squads in Central America and escalating the US war in Southeast Asia, for example, US President Kennedy issued a prescient warning when he told Latin American diplomats, "Those who make nonviolent revolution impossible make violent revolution inevitable." Militants in Pakistan, if they are responsible for Bhutto's assassination, might be hoping for exactly this scenario. Musharraf, to the degree that he is responsible (Bhutto had in recent days complained about a lack of security and said if she is killed, "I would hold Musharraf responsible"), is clearly defying Kennedy's warning. The consequences of a violent revolution, which is already also well under way in Pakistan (with at least 600 killed by suicide bombers in the last six months, according to the BBC), while always frightening to consider, are multiplied here, in a nuclear armed state with dubious command and control mechanisms. Also frightening: what might government and military leaders in India, Israel, China, and the US be planning if they become afraid that Pakistani nuclear command and control is breaking down? The UN Security Council convened in emergency session last night to unanimously condemn Bhutto's killing.

For more information on Post-Emergency (post November 2007) struggles in Pakistan, see, for example, The Pakistani Federal Union of Journalists, and the Support Pakistan pages with excellent policy-related news and links to additional organizations working both inside Pakistan and around the world to support human rights. This aggregation of Pakistani blogs provides insight. Please also see more Peacework Magazine stories on Pakistan from 1999-present.

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Bhutto's Courage

Hello all,
My father, Jim Diener, mentioned to me that he thought I was too critical of the politics of Benazir Bhutto in this post. He cited her incredible courage in going into politics in the first place after her father was executed by the military, and her challenge to male supremacy by running for and winning the prime ministership as a muslim woman. This is certainly the case.
He also mentioned that she was instrumental in feminist protests against disenfranchisement through problems with the National Identity Cards, which NGOs have been protesting. I haven't been able to document Bhuttos' role in that struggle yet.
It certainly took incredible courage to return to Pakistan in October of 2007 despite the many threats on her life. Her determination to continue campaigning for a restoration of non-military-rule despite the bomb attack on her and the PPP supporters upon her return, and despite being placed under house arrest by Musharraf, was also admirable.
People are complex, and that's one thing I hope a nonviolent perspective can add.
What do you think?

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