Benazir has gone mad (merged)

Violating the Official Secrets Act.

Ms Bhutto disclosed to Bhatia: “He was my Director General Military Operations and he presented me with his plan in front of 50 officers about how the mujahideen would infiltrate an area similar to Kargil, how they would bring about a war and how the Indians wouldn’t be able to dislocate us and they would be forced to start a second front at which point the international community would intervene and we would take Srinagar.” The interview or its contents have not been disputed by the PPP despite its publication on August 21.

“It was irresponsible on the part of the former prime minister to speak about an India related military operation and that too with an Indian reporter,” said a senior Pakistani official. A senior PPP leader in Islamabad, requesting anonymity, recalled: “Ms Bhutto had granted this interview soon after the Swiss magistrate’s judgment and she thought that the military junta had bribed the Swiss magistrate to defame her internationally.”

The oath of the prime minister says: “I’ll not disclose to anyone any matter or subject that is brought into my knowledge as the prime minister.” No head of state or top government of Pakistan official has ever been convicted for violating the Official Secrets Act.

trust me she has nothing better to do now except tarnish the pak gov the stupied … :mad: she want to go back to take billions of more dollars from pak the cow . that woman has not even a shred of shame and dignity lets hope she goes to hell nice and quick

:smack:

koi haal naheen

mad she is!
the ppl who ever brought her to power are beyond description and the ppl who want her (or Nawaz sharif) back now should be tried for treason and hanged!
by thw way was she referring to our president in the interview?

Is there any law which restrict her to be take part in politics cause of this violation?..

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by shahbax: *
Is there any law which restrict her to be take part in politics cause of this violation?..
[/QUOTE]

infact she has been banned an now can not take part in Pakistani politics because the LFO says anyone who has been elected as PM twice cannot hold office again. the LFO was created before she gave the above interview. so whatever she says, who cares? after all they are all pissed off because they are being deprived of the opportunities to loot on the nation's wealth.
about what she did in the interview, i think she can be sued by the Govt of Pakistan, but good things rarely happen.

nice reply haris :k:

The Pakistan government is considering filing a case of treason against former prime minister Benazir Bhutto for revealing in an interview to India Abroad that General Pervez Musharraf harboured ambitions of capturing Srinagar long before the Kargil war.

rediff.com owns India Abroad, the widely circulated newspaper published for the Indian-American community.

In an exclusive interview with Senior Editor Shyam Bhatia in London, Bhutto had disclosed that Musharraf, then her Director General of Military Operations, outlined a plan to infiltrate Kashmir and start a war that would end up, he believed, with the Pakistani conquest of Srinagar.

rediff.com presents the now controversial interview which was published in the August 22 issue of India Abroad.

Is it true that you have met Condoleezza Rice because the Bush administration wishes to build bridges with you?

No, I would love to meet her. I did meet her before she was National Security Adviser. I have tremendous respect for her being a woman and rising to such a high position. I think the Bush administration is very sensitive about contacts with the opposition. These days Musharraf is a key ally of the West.

I am sorry about this because I think the more the West supports Musharraf, the stronger the extremist forces grow and the moderate forces are being marginalized, that’s not good for Pakistan.

How long can Musharraf last?

As long as the army supports him, not as long as America supports him. The American support is one factor because the army will say, ‘we need weapons or money and so we need Musharraf.’ Right now they think good, he’s getting us the money and our ideological perception continues.

Since 1977 our security establishment was hijacked by Zia-ul Haq’s officers. They think Pakistan should have a puppet government in Afghanistan so that we can get strategic depth all the way up to the Amur river. They think that through nuclear brinkmanship they can bring India to its knees because they think no matter how intense the insurgency gets in Kashmir what can India do?

Ultimately, if India tries to have a war, the world community will have to intervene to stop it going nuclear and if the world community does not come in, India knows if it crosses into Lahore, Pakistan will throw a bomb.

India might retaliate but it will still mean so many people in India will die.

They have this strategy and they think having Musharraf on top allows them to pursue this strategy.

There is also rising anti-Americanism in Pakistan.

There is rising anti-Americanism for different reasons. One of them is that Musharraf is a dictator and people feel angry that the West talks about freedom but turns a blind eye to the empowerment of Pakistanis.

The second reason is that we have a very large Pakhtun population and the bombing in Afghanistan led to many civilian deaths and people knew each other across the border, so there is that grief.

The third thing is that we have a large military class wedded to the idea that Afghanistan is critical to Pakistan because of strategic depth. This class also has a pensioner class and there are constituencies within that who are anti-American.

Does Musharraf have an exit strategy?

No he does not. He thinks if he remains head of the army nobody will throw him out. He fails to remember that army chiefs in Pakistan have not had a very nice life. Yahya Khan went to Ayub and told him, ‘Go home sir’ and he had to.

General Gul Hasan went to Yahya and said, ‘Go home sir,’ and he had to. General Zia died and if he was killed it had to be by his own men.

General Asif Nawaz died and again if he was killed it is because his own men wanted a change. [Jehangir] Karamat resigned and Musharraf himself was about to be killed in a plane crash.

General Musharraf is a pretty bright man, isn’t he?

That’s what people say, but from what I remember of him, I was quite disappointed by his analytical skills. He was my Director General Military Operations and he presented me with his plan in front of 50 officers about how the mujahideen would infiltrate an area similar to Kargil. How they would bring about a war and the Indians wouldn’t be able to dislocate us and they would be forced to start a second front at which point the international community would intervene and we would take Srinagar.

I said to him, ‘General, what would happen on the day after you took Srinagar.’ He replied, ‘I don’t know what you mean, I don’t understand your question.’

I think he personally doesn’t like me because of that confrontation we had in GHQ on the Kargil issue. But believe me I had to have that confrontation because if I did not, the blood of 3,000 soldiers would be on my hands.

After I was overthrown they went ahead with their folly and 3,000 of our young boys, the best in our army, died, so many on the Indian side died, there was so much bitterness. The whole world had to intervene to stop it escalating into a nuclear war.

How did you find Musharraf personally, all those pictures of him with his dogs and his whisky?

He was quite a jolly officer initially. I don’t know about the whisky drinking and dog loving because I did not see him with his dogs or his whisky. But he was my translator for the Turkish delegation, he was very sharp. He was also very close to General Hamid Gul, who was one of the corps commanders. When they had this exercise ‘Zarb Al Momen,’ he was my conducting officer.

We had this fracas on the Kargil war games proposal and I don’t know if he has ever got over it. But we politicians learn that there are no such things as personal feelings in politics. It’s the interests of the country, of the party, of the people.

Nawaz Sharif and I were at daggers drawn. Believe me what we suffered at his hands I will always remember, but I have put it behind me. He suffered too and now he is a changed man. He very much opposes the military exploitation of our country.

Do Pakistanis hate all Indians, or is it just Hindus they dislike?

It changes from times of tension to times of less tension. When there is tension and there are troops on the border they hate everyone who is Indian, irrespective of whether they are Muslim or Hindu.

When there is no tension people really welcome Indians. Indian films are very popular, Indian goods are smuggled across all the time, people are desperate to get Indian visas and travel to India to visit their families or the Taj Mahal.

Overseas the Pakistanis, Indians, Bangladeshis see themselves as South Asians, they work together, they socialise together, there is no hatred at all.

There must be others in Pakistan who are broadminded?

If you leave it to the people they want to be friends. Sometimes I think your country and my country, the military need wars so they can go on buying weapons. I don’t know, but as far as people to people links are concerned, there is a lot of love and affection.

When l first talked of peace in 1987 between India and Pakistan there was so much criticism. I was called an Indian agent and an Israeli agent. Now I see that everyone is falling into line.

So Kashmir is the stumbling block?

It’s for negotiation. When I was prime minister the Indian government had agreed to put Kashmir as an agenda item and we had two agenda items.

One was Kashmir and the second was Indo-Pak. We said we would not let lack of progress on one issue impede progress on the other.

After India went nuclear in 1988 the Pakistan People’s Party had a reappraisal. We said we don’t want to follow tit for tat with India. We should follow our core interests, but not copy India. India wants a bomb, we want a bomb. India wants a missile, we want a missile etc. We said we must dissociate from tit for tat.

The second thing we said was that if we disagree on the territorial unity of Kashmir, we can till work for the social unity of Kashmir by working for safe and open borders. If we have safe and open borders people can travel and trade. Ultimately I feel we have to ask ourselves with all that population what can we do to pick ourselves out of this mess for the future.

The only way forward for us is to try and see what the European Union did and to have a kind of tariffs and common market. If we open up, people will come and visit Pakistan, more hotels will be built, more people will get jobs. It’s the same in your country.

Do Pakistanis feel they should rule in New Delhi?

I don’t know about that but I have met people who are very bitter about India and I am sure you have the same on your side who have witnessed massacres. People who witnessed the massacres find it difficult to let go.

But generally those who did not witness massacres all want to talk about their homes in India. Indians are the same. Mr I K Gujral [former Indian prime minister] has told me of his homes in Jhelum and Mr Advani has told me of Karachi and Hyderabad.

Benazir :smack:

thanks 5Abi!

thanks for posting the whole thing durango, the woman is clearly an enemy of the state, no doubt she should be tried for treason.

^ True, But what is stopping them from doing it :)

Benazir has gone mad

???

:)

who said shes gone mad?
????

she was mad from the beginin..
proof: killin her bros for the sake of ur seat..... how more mad can u get.....

im glad mushy is here and kickin a lot ppl out.. atleast now we have some parties who never got a chance, have been given a chance to show.... so tehre is a more balance of power

good on ya mushy..

What about the people who came up with Kargil plan, are they not mad?

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Imdad Ali: *
What about the people who came up with Kargil plan, are they not mad?
[/QUOTE]

Mad perhaps...but traitors/unpatriotic...definately no!

Politicians like her should be liquidated. Hey Imdad, do you remember the 'Babar' treatment of Karachi? In Sindh, PPP/Bhutto run on a Sindhi nationalist platform, just remember that the next time you visit Karachi, ok?

this woman and her family have been a curse on pakistan
her father was the reason for the division of the country and the daughter is a selfish dangerous vamp

Second part of her interview

In the second part of her exclusive interview – the first part of which the Pakistan government finds treasonous – to Senior Editor Shyam Bhatia in London, former Pakistan prime minister Benazir Bhutto says dictators oppose her because she symbolises freedom, free markets and a modern Pakistan.

Could you comment on the recent pronouncement of the Swiss magistrate, Daniel Devaud, who has convicted you and your husband of money laundering?

I wish I could understand why the Swiss magistrate did this, but perhaps he was poisoned over six years by things that my political opponents had to say. I happen to be the most popular leader in Pakistan and election polls have proved that.

Therefore for a series of people I must be eliminated. The first successor tried to eliminate me, to impose a one party rule in the country. Now the military again wants to eliminate me because they want the MMA [Mutahida Majlis-e-Amal] – the alliance of religious parties – to be the only alternative in the country.

So long as I am leading the PPP [Pakistan Peoples Party], the party has the support of the people. So I think this is an attempt to eliminate my leadership through motivated charges.

What is Magistrate Devaud’s actual charge? He seems to have fined you and your husband large amounts of money.

I have no idea because I have not been given a copy of the order. I am working with a detective agency to procure a copy of the order that was passed on the 31st of July. The detective agency has managed to obtain a copy of the order in French and right now some supporters are trying to translate the order from French into English so that I can understand it.

I need to have a fair opportunity to respond but when orders are passed behind my back, communicated to the government of Pakistan, I have to respond on the basis of what sources in the government tell me.

Do you still believe you will be welcome if you go back to Pakistan and that you could be prime minister again? Is the political game over for Benazir Bhutto?

It’s not over for me, not in a democratic way. If there is dictatorship, yes, dictators oppose me because I symbolise freedom, free markets, a modern Pakistan integrating with the rest of the world community.

The people of Pakistan support me because of my programmes. They first supported me because of my father, now they support me because in my terms of office they got social and economic development.

They saw here’s a prime minister who cares for the poor, who’s eliminating polio, bringing down infant mortality, reducing population growth rate, building 48,000 primary schools, teaching people computer literacy, getting optic fibres put across Pakistan so that our people can be equipped for the 21st century, attracting investment which is creating jobs and young people are building their lives, building roads and bridges in Karachi and Lahore and Pindi, dry port in Faisalabad.

So people love me now because they see that under my leadership they benefited.

They had peace with India, they didn’t have these Kargil adventures. They had peace with Afghanistan because there was no Al Qaeda in Afghanistan when I was prime minister. There may have been Taliban but there was no Al Qaeda. Militants and militias were on the run.

Look at all the flowers around here, they are all from people who say ‘we are standing by you.’

You really care about going back?

I care about the people, I don’t care about the power because I’ve been prime minister twice. I do care about Pakistan and I do care about the people. For me the best option is that I could go back and be president or prime minister of Pakistan because I could help Pakistan be a modern state.

I am concerned when I see Pakistanis finger-printed and mug-shotted. They are finger-printed and mug-shotted because all the time people are popping up like Khalid Sheikh and other wanted Al Qaeda [members]. So we are suspects in the eyes of the world community and I would like to change that.

At the same time last year when I was banned from contesting, I told my party, please contest because I am not interested in power. I am interested in the poor people, I want to help the poor of Pakistan and if you all form the government, I will feel I have formed the government.

So my first option is to be prime minister or president of Pakistan. But my first love is the people of Pakistan and I want them to prosper and I feel that what I am facing today has nothing to do with corruption.

Just yesterday I heard that Musharraf has taken with his generals 10 acres.

He and four others, the finance minister, his military secretary, his brother-in-law who is also in the army, they have taken 10 acres in Islamabad. I never took even one square yard in Islamabad.

Look at the house where I was born in and look at the house Musharraf was born in. Look at the school I went to and look at the school where he went to. Look at the house I lived in before I got married and look at the house he lived in after he married.

Today he has got so much real estate. Where did he get it from? Because I speak about accountability in the army, because I speak about the armed forces reforming themselves and going back to the austere lifestyle of General Tikka and General Babar, the greedy generals don’t like it.

Does a mere Swiss magistrate have the authority to pronounce on such weighty matters such as ordering you to pay £30 million to the military government of Pakistan?

You are right, a magistrate is a minor judicial figure and he cannot confiscate money and pronounce on such matters. This magistrate has given a finding and if I challenge this finding, it will be quashed and the matter will go to court and the government of Pakistan will have to produce prosecution witnesses and we will have the right to cross examine them as one should.

In fact I have already been charged on this charge of abusing my office to award a contract to a pre-shipment firm to benefit my husband.

I was already charged on that and there was a total lack of evidence, but I was being framed until miraculously these tape recordings surfaced, which proved that the law ministry had written the judgement. Then the supreme court set it aside and sent it for re-trial.

I live in Karachi, the first trial took place in Lahore. Now they are making me face the same charges again in Pindi and there my lawyers have appealed to the supreme court that this is double jeopardy and you cannot be tried twice.

I have now been told that since the Swiss magistrate has found against me, I will be tried for a third time on the same charge.

The charge is a simple one. The charge is that Benazir Bhutto abused her position as prime minister of Pakistan to influence the awards of the pre-shipment contracts to financially benefit her husband. It’s a charge that I’ve denied, but it’s a charge that I have faced in Lahore. It was set aside after the day it surfaced, it’s a charge that’s going in Pindi and now they are saying it’s a charge that will apply in Switzerland.

I’m quite happy to face the charge. I faced it in Lahore, I’ve got lawyers in Pindi and I know that my supporters will rally around me and I’ll face the charge in Switzerland. But I do ask is this the way justice is done?

This is my main issue. You can try me in Switzerland, but then withdraw the charge in Pindi.

Teresita C Schaffer from the Centre of Strategic Studies in Washington, DC has been quoted as saying that as Swiss courts have a reputation for probity, this decision will damage you politically at home, irreparably.

Tessie has on several occasions made negative statements about my leadership and the confidence of the people in politics and she has been proved wrong. Prior to my original conviction being set aside, Tessie also made several pronouncements.

I think there is a dichotomy at play here and I think the dichotomy is that in Pakistan I have a widespread popular base. People are with me and elections have repeatedly been rigged and observers have noted they were rigged. French observers in 1997 and then the European Union spoke of serious flaws in 2002 and they have been done to keep me out. But internationally I believe I have alienated some of my old friends in the West because I am seen as the daughter of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto who gave Pakistan the nuclear bomb.

And I am seen as the person who helped Pakistan acquire nuclear technology, enabling Pakistan to deliver nuclear capable missiles. So I think there is a concern in the international community that a weak Pakistan and a Pakistan dependent on the international community is better than a strong Pakistan. So perhaps that is the reason why they would want to see me undermined.

Or, secondly, maybe they just believe what they have been fed by the establishment. I have always been puzzled by the amount of support I have in Pakistan and at the same time by the popular support I have in the West where I am recognised and respected. But in the institutional framework there have always been reservations about me.

Right now if there is a fair election under the Pakistan Human Rights Commission, I will form the government.

*she symbolises freedom, free markets and a modern Pakistan. *

what freedom or modernization did she bring to her own ppl, forget anywhere else, look at larkana.

Could you comment on the recent pronouncement of the Swiss magistrate, Daniel Devaud, who has convicted you and your husband of money laundering?

I wish I could understand why the Swiss magistrate did this, but perhaps he was poisoned over six years by things that my political opponents had to say.

thats a really big "perhaps"

*right now some supporters are trying to translate the order from French into English so that I can understand it. *

trying to translate? abay how hard is it to translate? any damn translation service can do it in a matter of a day or two.

So people love me now because they see that under my leadership they benefited.

yep all the PPP leaders and other assorted civil servnets benefitted directly under her leadership. additionally, her husband and father in law benefitted too :)

*There may have been Taliban but there was no Al Qaeda. *

errr, but OBL was still in afghanistan then..and niether did she do anything to curb internal groups like sipah e sahaba and sipah e muhammad who keep killign shias and sunnis respectively.

So my first option is to be prime minister or president of Pakistan.

why, she cant do anything for the peopel of pakistan if she in not the prez or the PM. hogwash..

*Tessie has on several occasions made negative statements about my leadership and the confidence of the people in politics and she has been proved wrong. *

challo ji, she is wrong too, swiss judge is wrong too.

But internationally I believe I have alienated some of my old friends in the West because I am seen as the daughter of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto who gave Pakistan the nuclear bomb.

errrr when did this happen

*And I am seen as the person who helped Pakistan acquire nuclear technology, enabling Pakistan to deliver nuclear capable missiles. *

huh?

So I think there is a concern in the international community that a weak Pakistan and a Pakistan dependent on the international community is better than a strong Pakistan. So perhaps that is the reason why they would want to see me undermined.

a few sentences earlier she wants pakistan to linked to teh rest of the world or blah blah and other such yip yap..

everyone is wrong, judges are wrong, analysts are wrong, other governments are wrong..its all a huge damn cospiracy to keep her out..sheesh what a freak

*Or, secondly, maybe they just believe what they have been fed by the establishment. *

now she is dissing the intelligence of the western governments..

I have always been puzzled by the amount of support I have in Pakistan and at the same time by the popular support I have in the West where I am recognised and respected. But in the institutional framework there have always been reservations about me.

hint because the institutions know the real you, people you can fool easily..

Right now if there is a fair election under the Pakistan Human Rights Commission, I will form the government.

..and that is the mullah ki dorr masjid takk....power power power..thats all she wants..

stupid bizzatch

[quote]
I am interested in the poor people, I want to help the poor of Pakistan....
[/quote]

kamini itnay jhoot keoun bolti hai.

[quote]
Look at the house where I was born in and look at the house Musharraf was born in. Look at the school I went to and look at the school where he went to. Look at the house I lived in before I got married and look at the house he lived in after he married.
[/quote]

What "house" does she live in? She's used to living in freaking palaces.

i'd rather have a dictator like Mushy any day over a thief, liar and swindler like her.