Pakistani President Zardari ends UK trip with rally

Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari has ended his visit to the UK with a speech to supporters of his Pakistan Peoples Party in Birmingham.

Mr Zardari has rejected criticism that he should have stayed at home to lead relief work, as numbers hit by the floods reached some 14 million.

Meanwhile, his son Bilawal Zardari Bhutto has opened a donation point in London for Pakistan’s flood victims.

Mr Bhutto denied the Birmingham rally was to launch his political career.

Mr Zardari’s speech, in Urdu, finished at about 1730 BST. A prayer was also offered to Mr Zardari’s wife, the former Pakistan prime minister Benazir Bhutto who was assassinated in 2007.

The British media was not invited inside the Birmingham ICC, where the rally took place, but the BBC’s Greg Wood at the scene said there was some heckling and it is understood a shoe was thrown at Mr Zardari.

The son of the president and assassinated former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, Mr Bhutto cancelled an appearance at the Birmingham event, saying he would open the donation point at Pakistan’s High Commission in the capital.

There had been claims that that he would make his first major political speech at the rally following his recent graduation from Oxford University.

Adult conversations

But in a short statement at the donation point, he said it had “never” been his intention to join his father in Birmingham and insisted that suggestions he was using his father’s visit to launch his political career were “all lies”.

Bilawal Bhutto Zardari: “We need to do whatever is necessary to help our brothers and sisters in Pakistan”
“This is not the time to play politics. We need to do whatever is necessary to help our brothers and sisters in Pakistan,” he added.

The 21-year-old is co-chairman of the Pakistan Peoples Party with his father.

International Development Secretary Andrew Mitchell defended Mr Zardari’s visit which he said had served to highlight the disaster and help raise international relief funds.

“He is drumming up support internationally for the huge relief effort that is going to be required now in Pakistan and is going to be returning very soon. I think he is right to continue that visit.”

During an interview with BBC Newsnight Mr Zardari also restated his commitment to fighting terrorism, following talks with UK Prime Minister David Cameron.

But he refused to be drawn on whether he had tackled Mr Cameron over his recent comments about Pakistan promoting terror.

He said the two men had focused on the “positive” in their discussions.

“We engaged in conversation like two adults,” said Mr Zardari.

The leaders issued a joint communique following their talks at Mr Cameron’s country retreat Chequers, stressing their commitment to work more closely in future in the battle against terrorism, and in other areas such as education and trade.

On Friday Mr Cameron hailed the “unbreakable” friendship between Britain and Pakistan and said the two men had discussed how to “deepen and enhance” their strategic partnership.

Pain

He said their talks had focused on making sure “we deal with all the issues where we want to make progress, whether that is in trade, whether it’s in education, and also in the absolutely vital area of combating terrorism”.

Mr Zardari said that Pakistan and the UK had a “friendship that will never break, no matter what happens”,

Bilawal Zardari Bhutto joined his father and Mr Cameron for dinner However, he told the Times Mr Cameron’s comments had hurt him personally.

“Everybody is sensitive, as we have lost so many people, including my late wife (Benazir Bhutto), So to have your credentials questioned does hurt sometimes. No matter how brave you are, it hurts,” he said.

Labour MP Khalid Mahmood accused Mr Zardari of not having “any empathy or sympathy” with what his people were going through as the country was left devastated by its worst monsoon floods in 80 years.

Asked in the Newsnight interview about such criticism, Mr Zardari said he was being kept up to date with the situation, but it was the responsibility of Pakistan’s prime minister, who was the country’s “chief executive”.

He had also secured promises of flood relief from Abu Dhabi, France and the UK, which had pledged an extra £20m, while he had been out of the country, he added.

Habib Malik, from Islamic Relief, has been in Naushera, a city in the northwest of Pakistan that has been hit badly by the floods.

He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “I have, personally, worked in many disasters in the last seven years - man made and natural - but this definitely is one of the worst I have experienced, mainly because this area was already poor.”

The Disasters Emergency Committee said the British public had donated £2.5m for flood victims within hours of the TV appeal being broadcast on Thursday night.

Source: Pakistani President Zardari ends UK trip with rally - BBC News

Re: Pakistani President Zardari ends UK trip with rally

Where is your ‘comment’ Amarbail? :aq:

Re: Pakistani President Zardari ends UK trip with rally

^ ?

Re: Pakistani President Zardari ends UK trip with rally

^ all threads required comments from original poster, or have things have changed at GS now?

Re: Pakistani President Zardari ends UK trip with rally

All I want to say that it was not the rite time for the President to leave the country ...

Re: Pakistani President Zardari ends UK trip with rally

I agree.

Re: Pakistani President Zardari ends UK trip with rally

^ That is correct. He should have stayed home. It was one stupid decision by him. I am sure it is going to be remembered by people for years. Similar to Nawaz's blunders like on naming NWFP, attacking supreme court, etc.

Re: Pakistani President Zardari ends UK trip with rally

^ And Altaf's blunder of calling Pakistan the biggest blunder in the history of mankind, or burning the Pakistani flag.

Re: Pakistani President Zardari ends UK trip with rally

I think the word 'rally' is very misleading in the thread title! ;)

joota parade is more like it

Re: Pakistani President Zardari ends UK trip with rally

Damned Politicians.

When the people are in such tragic times so close to the indepandance day these shamless "leaders" are out collecting thier own roti funds... UUff gone are the days when men were men.

Goneare the days of Liyakat Ali Khan.

amazingly here people abuse their president very bad very bad
cant respect their president ? at least the chair of the president?
everybody in pakistan thinks himself compentent enough to advise govt about affairs of the country ,you people forget such tours are planned months before .
for day to day affairs prime minister looks after running the state affairs through experianced beaurocrats. according to some retards president should go himself to drop relief . what a country full of .....
my country is full of such........ but no body disrespects the president

Who said that?

but as president it IS his moral duty to visit the flood-affected areas and meet with affectees. If he thinks otherwise then he is not fit to be the head of state....period

Zardari should have had the commonsense to postpone the trip when close to 5 million people have been affected by recent floods, the worst in our country's history and not have been swanning around in France and UK. That is the height of stupidity

And even the political rally (to launch nawab sahib Lord Bilawal's career) in Birmingham was cancelled at the last minute under immense pressure from the media and British Pakistanis. so stop kidding yourself.

And while we respect the office of the president, we w'd not even think about using words like 'crook' 'chor' 'corrupt' etc. for people like Jinnah and Liaquat. We respect them with with our hearts

should atleast make you wonder why..

Re: Pakistani President Zardari ends UK trip with rally

How would you feel if Dawood Ibrahim somehow becomes president of India? Would people still respect "President"?