The Last Interview of Z.A Bhutto

I stumbled across this online (it’s more historical then political so it was a choice between soc-culture, where nobody would read it, and General.

“Zulifikar Ali Bhutto’s last interview”](http://www.khalidhasan.net/)

The last formal interview given to a journalist by Zulfikar Ali Bhutto took place on 10th August, 1977, just over a month after his overthrow and 33 days before his arrest, imprisonment, trial and execution on 4th April, 1979.

The journalist was Inam Aziz, who with Habibur Rehman, had been invited from London to meet Zia-ul-Haq. Inam Aziz, one of Pakistan’s great campaigning editors, was a known admirer of ZAB, which should have made him a persona non grata in the military government’s book, but those were early days and the regime was still trying to find its feet. On 8th August, Inam was in Lahore, the day ZAB landed to a welcome whose like the city had not accorded to anyone since Liu Shao-chi. While milling crowds were escorting Bhutto, who had just been released from “protective custody,” to Nawab Sadiq Hussain’s residence, Maulana Shah Ahmed Noorani, who was on his way to the airport, was waylaid, pulled out of his car, roughed up and made to shout ‘Jiye Bhutto’ by exuberant PPP workers.

Inam Aziz recounted his meeting with ZAB in Stop Press , a little-noticed but fascinating autobiography. During the Zia years, it was only his London-based Urdu daily Millat that continued to denounce military rule. It is another matter that when the PPP came to power, men like Inam Aziz found themselves banished from the camp of victory, but that is another story for another day. What follows is Inam Aziz’s recollection of ZAB’s last recorded interview.

He was taken to see Bhutto by Maulana Kausar Niazi. Bhutto with his photographic memory recognised Inam, greeting him by name, though he had only met him a couple of times. Inam presented Bhutto with a box of Havana cigars, one of which Bhutto lit up. The interview had barely begun when there was a phone call for Bhutto in the next room. When he returned fifteen minutes later, he was fuming. When Inam asked who had called, Bhutto said, “It was Zia and he threatened to kill me. I have told him that if I survive, I will have him and 35 of his generals hanged for treason.” After some time Bhutto said, “He held me responsible for the manhandling of Noorani. This is the first time he has been impertinent with me. When he came to see me in Murree, he could not stop ‘sirring’ me. Today there was arrogance in his voice.” When Inam remarked that Zia’s threat should be taken seriously, Bhutto drew at his cigar and said, “I am not afraid of death. I am a man of history and you cannot silence history.”

When Inam quoted Zia as saying that he would hold elections in 90 days and transfer power, Bhutto smiled, “You expect these people to hold elections! Don’t expect liars to speak the truth.” When Inam told him that Zia had cited God as a witness to his pledge to hold free and fair elections, Bhutto remarked, “That’s another of his lies. I have just told you about my conversation with him, so you can decide for yourself if there will ever be elections in this country.” When Inam asked him about his fall, Bhutto smiled and said, “To tell you the truth, I chose the wrong advisers. I have come to hate members of this pseudo-intellegensia who received favours from me but have now joined hands with the army.” On the rigging charge, he said he had not ordered it and only seven constituencies may have been involved.

Bhutto told Inam about the inquiry he had ordered into the rigging and the resulting 10-page report of which the army had a copy. The investigation had found that the American government was heavily involved in the post-election unrest. Hundreds of millions in PL-480 funds were spent to fuel the protest movement. In some mosques mullahs had been found with dollars. During the agitation, as soon as someone was injured, opposition parties would arrive on the scene and begin doling out money. The American embassy was orchestrating the effort. He added that the US embassy had been told that the government had evidence of American meddling and would like a meeting on the issue with the Secretary of State. Some days later, the US embassy replied that Secretary of State William Rogers would be in Paris for a NATO meeting and a representative could be sent to meet him.

The cabinet chose Aziz Ahmed, who arrived in Paris with the evidence. The meeting with Rogers took place at the American embassy, but whenever Aziz Ahmed would try to raise the issue of American interference, Rogers would tell him that the US and Pakistan being old friends, what had happened in the past should not impede the resumption of good relations. Whenever Aziz Ahmed would try to open his briefcase to reach for the documents he was carrying, Rogers would stop him and assure him that Pakistan would have no further cause for complaint. After the meeting, Aziz Ahmed left his briefcase with Ambassador Muzaffar Ali Qizalbash for safekeeping. When he returned to his hotel after attending a reception, he found his room vandalised. He called the manager who expressed shock and astonishment. Since Aziz Ahmed knew who his “visitors” had been, he decided against approaching the police. “Do you realise now what a clash with a big power can involve?” Bhutto asked Inam.

When Inam asked Bhutto what would happen if elections were held in 90 days, he replied that all the waderas and zamidars would be wiped out and even he would be finished as a wadera , but if the people felt that he would meet their aspirations, they would not reject him. When Inam asked him why the army was only able to stage coups in Pakistan and not in India, Bhutto replied that 85 per cent of the army comes from the Punjab, as does the bureaucracy. When the two join hands, political forces become helpless. He conceded that political forces, in order to protect their interests, often become tools in the hands of this army-civil combine. When Inam rose to take his leave, Bhutto said, “If you learn when you return to London that I am still alive, come back and we will meet.” When Inam replied that if Bhutto returned to power, people like him would not be able to get to see him, Bhutto replied, “I don’t think this time things are going to be like that.”

Bhutto, of course, never regained power and Inam Aziz died in London in 1993.

(Friday Times)

Re: The Last Interview of Z.A Bhutto

I used to have a document that provided the findings of a body that was asked to investigate the circumstances surrounding Bhutto's execution.

It revealed some pretty interesting facts.

I better find it.....must be buried somewhere in Ammi's books.

Re: The Last Interview of Z.A Bhutto

What exactly did it explain Muzna? Are you talking about Schofields book?

Re: The Last Interview of Z.A Bhutto

No...it's not a book.
It's a report.....ammi and papa somehow got their hands on a copy.
It describes, in minute detail, the proceedings etc. during the time that he was taken into custody and then up to the time that he was hanged.

Re: The Last Interview of Z.A Bhutto

is it this one?
http://www.paklinks.com/gs/showthread.php?t=187605

Re: The Last Interview of Z.A Bhutto

it is similar...there was more.
I'm gonna hunt.

Re: The Last Interview of Z.A Bhutto

And how he came back to life like Jefus...

Re: The Last Interview of Z.A Bhutto

More like how he was murdered by yazeed (Zia).

Re: The Last Interview of Z.A Bhutto

I want to rent a DVD that is made on the life and actions of Zia including some interviews which potrays him as a nice person and he tells why he had to what he did- esp.. he explains his stand about ZAB. I am not getting it anywhere.

Re: The Last Interview of Z.A Bhutto

Hahahaha...Thats the most hilarious thing I've heard in a long time...

What about thousands Bhattu murdered...

Read Bhattu's close confident's Rafi Raza's memoirs and know how obsessed he was with another fellow civilian tyrant Hitler and how he tried to emulate him and his tactics urging various members of his cabinet to assume the roles of the many infamous henchmen of Hitler's...

Re: The Last Interview of Z.A Bhutto

If Zia hadn't hung his insidious and meglomaniac a$$, he would have taken the whole country down...More sweets were distributed on his hanging then for any other event in Pakistan's history, even more then the nuclear explosions...

He was the only true tyrant in the modern history of South Asia...our version of the ruthless mass murderers whole rule much of the middle eastern and other pariah countries...

If anything this was the best thing done by Zia...And may Allah grant him jannah for doing that...

Re: The Last Interview of Z.A Bhutto

Wow seems like either people love the guy or hate em...why though? :-s

Re: The Last Interview of Z.A Bhutto

i'm no fan either, but have to say that zab was imo the most charismatic leader in pakistan's history. listen to his speaches and you'll realize what a masterful politician he was.
interesting to read that he finally admitted some of his shortcomings, and surprising to learn that some of his loyal supporters were not welcomed during bb's time.

Re: The Last Interview of Z.A Bhutto

Well sure, but then Zia imposed martial law, was brutal in many ways- plus Islamic fundamentalism rose during his rule cuz he appeased the mullahs to he benefit... didnt he? Anyone here who personally experienced unrest and faced problems during Zia's rule?

Re: The Last Interview of Z.A Bhutto

interference in Pakistan's internal affairs by America.. so what's new..

Bhutto should have written the kaccha chatta to be published... but i guess he was only human and got weak at the end..

Re: The Last Interview of Z.A Bhutto

I am no fan of his either, but you must admit and give credit where credit is due…ZAB’s foreign policies have yet to be matched by any leader since his time although his internal affairs left a lot to be desired…

We have a lot to be thankful for to ZAB specially for being a nuclear power…It was him and Qaddafi who masterminded the whole Islamic Bomb idea…(If you can get your hands on a documentary by BBC which is banned in Pakistan called ‘The Islamic Bomb’, even today I believe, you can gain a lot of insight…)

His daughter on the other hand, raped, pillagd and plundered this country to brink of extinction…She applied her own persona to Pakistan and nearly whored it away to nothing…

ZAB is also monumental in creating OIC, an organization that was slowly gaining grounds…Of those who started the OIC, Bhutto, Shah Faisal and Sadat were assasinated, Qaddafi was left stranded in the west’s bid to gain more power over the Middle East, and the other minor leaders had little or no interest in the affairs of the Ummah…

OIC, which was a brainchild of Bhutto, posed the first real threat to Zionism when the Al-Aqsa Masjid was set on fire by the Zionists…Too bad most of the main leaders were taken out of the picture…

Give credit where credit is due bro…He may have been a horrible person but his achievements can in no way be marginalized…

Re: The Last Interview of Z.A Bhutto

I must profess my ignorance on this matter. Could you tell me why he was a horrible person >? I do understand his accomplishments though im totally unbaised on this matter.

Re: The Last Interview of Z.A Bhutto

Kod: Bhutto was a brilliant but flawed man, his rule was marked by targetted victimisation of both friends and foe. Thats not unusual in Pakistan and by comparison to what Zia and other Military rulers left as a legacy (Ayubs reign had two Army operations in Balochistan, the rigging of one Presidential election, Yahya was responsible for the Army operation in East Pakistan and Zia the Army operation in Sindh as well as Karachis problems) you could say he was not very different and perhaps marginally better.

To put the reason why he offends and enthralls people with equal abandon, yhis biggest flaw was he made politics personal. Whereas other leaders were quite brutal they never targetted individuals for special treatment the way Bhutto did..he would often say he would fix his (name of opponent inserted). This fixing ranged from imprisoning without trial and torture of opponents like the Pashtun and Baloch leaders of the NAP to the murder and false imprisonment of people in the Muslim League and JI (the JI leaders like Tufail and PML ones suffered quite badly with many swearing revenge) . This policy extended to the civil service and business community, the Civil service lost many officers simply because Bhutto believed they were responsible for his difficulties in the oppositopm between 1966 and 1969 or simply because he didn't like them. As far as the Army goes he was remarkably kind to the Army overseeing the return of POWs held by India, protecting Army leaders from war crimes trials and the biggest expansion in size and weaponry since the 1950's. Depsite all the negativity it is also accepted that the backlash against the rigging of the 1977 election had forced Bhutto into a corner and he'd agreed to compromise with the opposition. His final act as Prime Minister was to sign an agreement with the opposition which would have set Pakistan on the right path, unfortunately Zia got wind of the news, probably from spies in both the opposition and Bhuttos government, and launched his coup.

Re: The Last Interview of Z.A Bhutto

Hitler and Moussolini were more charismatic, listen to their speeches and you will be spell bounded...he was out mini-fascist, a Hitler-Lite....

Re: The Last Interview of Z.A Bhutto

Dude, none of this had any positive effect on the Pakistanis or even Muslim world whatso ever...The nuclear power, the only thing he did was invite AQKhan and set up a lab for him, who at most contributed 10% to the whole effort, 90% of the work, infrastructure, personnel that facilitated the nuclear development was done by Ayub, when he sent hundreds of scientists, engineers, technicians abroad for training and also setting up of PAEC....

OIC is as casterated as it was back in the 70s...his foreign policies were as disasterous as ever, he tore up the Poland resolution, which would have lead to ceasefire in E. Pakistan and would have blocked the creation of Bangladesh...