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Benazir Bhutto: A Script Not Written in Hollywood


Article # : 10872 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 7 / 1986  2,484 Words
Author : Nayyar Zaidi
Nayyar Zaidi is the Washington correspondent of Pakistan's largest newspaper, Daily Jang. He frequently contributes on South Asian affairs to American newspapers.

       It seems like a story written for Hollywood. The Harvard-educated young woman returns from years of self-exile to her native Third World country. Her objective: to "liberate her people from bondage" and to topple the "military dictator" who allegedly sent her father to the gallows. The late prime minister, she claims, was sentenced to death on "trumped-up" charges of complicity in the murder of a political opponent. Her receptions are tumultuous. Aided by her loyal supporters and the "masses," she finally prevails. Everyone lives happily ever after.
       
        Those familiar with South Asia must have recognized all the unnamed places and characters in the above story. The country is Pakistan. The young woman is Benazir Bhutto, 33-year-old daughter of the late Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto. The "military dictator," of course, is none other than general Mohammad Zia-ul-Haq, who has ruled Pakistan since July 5, 1977.
       
        The return of Benazir Bhutto was an anxiously awaited event. The lifting of martial law itself was simply a curtain-raiser for her "grand" entrance, and grand it was in many ways. From London, she went straight to the historic city of Lahore (in Punjab province) where hundreds of thousands of people cheered her from the airport to the park where she addressed a large public meeting.
       
        The pattern was repeated in her appearances in various parts of the country through the second week of May - the beginning of a month-long fast in Pakistan, a country with a 98 percent Muslim population.
       
        The obvious question is whether she can succeed in doing what most ... (2000 of 14426 Characters)
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