Pakistan is Unraveling
by Mona Eltahawy
At a conference on radicalization in The Hague in October, a former Pakistani foreign minister told a small group of us that he had recently warned Benazir Bhutto in a phone conversation that her return to Pakistan after eight years of self-imposed exile could be greeted by someone wearing a suicide belt.
“Do you doubt my popularity?†she asked him from Dubai, where she had been living.
No, he replied, reminding her instead that Pakistan had changed since she left.
[Republished at PFP with express Agence Global permission.]
For feminist Muslim writer Mona Eltahawy, Benazir Bhutto was a
captivating figure when she was the leader of a Muslim country. Now,
Bhutto's assassination shows how seriously Pakistan is unraveling.
VELEN, Germany - Hours after she returned home on October 19, not one, but two
people were wearing suicide belts to meet Bhutto, and killing over 135
people, and showing her how much her country had changed. It was one of
the deadliest attacks in Pakistan’s history. Now, the count is over 400
people dead in suicide attacks there in recent months.
Just
before she was shot dead at her rally by an assassin who then blew
himself up, Bhutto had acknowledged the changed Pakistan. She told her
supporters at Rawalpindi, "I put my life in danger and came here
because I feel this country is in danger. People are worried. We will
bring the country out of this crisis.â€
Never the most stable
of countries, Pakistan is unraveling. It is difficult to find a
combination of more spectacular disasters than those waiting to happen
in Pakistan:
- Osama Bin Laden is apparently still hiding in caves
straddling the Pakistani-Afghan border; and, Taliban and al-Qaeda
militants move freely across that border and have supporters among the
Pakistani intelligence services.
- Pakistan is ruled by
Pervez Musharraf, a dictator who up until just a few weeks ago was also
head of the army and has filled the country’s jails with Supreme Court
judges and accomplished lawyers because they represent a potent liberal
and secular opposition; Musharraf has been much more forgiving of his
radical opponents, holding them up as the requisite boogeyman that he
claims to be fighting in the ever-expanding War on Terror.
- And if that isn't enough of a political cacophony, don't forget Pakistan has a goodly supply of nuclear weapons.
Perhaps
only a fool would claim to know who sent the assassin to Rawalpindi,
but it does not take a genius to appreciate the magnitude of the crisis
that Bhutto acknowledged, and that her murder will surely accelerate.
For
me as a Muslim writer, Pakistan holds the confluence of the ills of the
Islamic world. Successive U.S. administrations have supported various
Pakistani dictators -- the current occupant of the White House is no
exception.
Just this week The New York Times reported that
the Bush administration and U.S. military officials believed that much
of $5 billion in U.S. military aid to Pakistan to bolster its military
effort against al-Qaeda and the Taliban instead had been diverted to
help finance weapons systems designed to counter India. The
assassination of Bhutto, whom the U.S. State Department earlier this
year had convinced to attempt a partnership with Musharraf, is bound to
make the Christmas hangover in Washington that much worse.
For
me as a young Muslim woman, Benazir Bhutto’s political career was
especially captivating. She was the first woman prime minister in the
Muslim world when she was elected in 1988, at the age of 35. Back then,
Hillary Clinton was still the wife of the governor of the little state
of Arkansas.
Here was Prime Minster Bhutto, the woman
leader of a Muslim republic no less, making irrelevant the
hair-splitting of Islamic clerics over whether women could ever hold
political power. Her election victory came the year I returned to
Egypt, my country of birth, a freshly minted feminist after six
difficult years in Saudi Arabia where women could not – and still
cannot – even drive a car. Let alone rule a country.
I
quickly learned to separate her gender from her politics. Bhutto's
record on women’s rights in Pakistan was not what one would’ve expected
from that country’s first female leader. Perhaps it was unfair to pile
so many expectations at her feet. But I thought it her responsibility,
as the woman leading a country where, for example, raped women go to
jail on adultery charges unless they can produce four witnesses to the
assault.
That judicial travesty was provided by the Hudood
Ordinances introduced in 1979 by General Zai ul-Haq, a military
dictator flexing his Muslim muscles by using religion against women.
(He was also the dictator who ousted -- and then executed -- Bhutto’s
father.) It is ironic that last December, the latest military dictator,
Musharraf, signed into law an amendment to that controversial rape
statute that makes it easier to prosecute sexual assault cases.
The
corruption charges that dogged Bhutto to her death are reminders to me
of how too often leaders in the Muslim world are dictators, or radical
Islamists who both oppose the dictator (and are used by him to frighten
his western allies), or corrupt opposition leaders.
I am
not terribly shocked at Bhutto’s assassination -- my capacity for shock
at what can happen in Pakistan has long been numbed. It turned off
altogether when a suicide bomber killed almost 50 people on December
21, in a mosque in northwest Pakistan. There, a former interior
minister was offering Muslim Eid festival prayers with worshippers. Eid
is one of the most joyous and loving of celebration in the Muslim
calendar. The fact that the horror of such an attack went largely
unnoticed in the global media -- but especially in the Muslim media --
is proof that Pakistan is unraveling.
Bhutto noticed and
condemned that atrocity at a rally on December 23, saying religious
schools in Pakistan were turning children into killers, and accusing
the government as timid and wrong-headed. "They always try to stop
democratic forces but don't make any effort to check extremists,
terrorists and fanatics," she said.
May she rest in peace and may Pakistan too find peace.
Mona
Eltahawy is an award-winning New York-based journalist and commentator,
and an international lecturer on Arab and Muslim issues.
Copyright ©2007 Mona Eltahawy / Agence Global
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Released: 28 December 2007
Word Count: 977
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Released: 28 December 2007
Word Count: 977
Rights & Permissions Contact: Agence Global, 1.336.686.9002, rights@agenceglobal.com
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