Nice op ed by Ghazi Salahuddin
A voyage round Bhutto
Ghazi Salahuddin
Today is fourth of April and this date awakens, in the minds of a large number of people, deep thoughts about the wayward course of our history. On this day, twenty-five years ago, military ruler General Zia-ul-Haq sent Zulfikar Ali Bhutto to the gallows. Twenty-five years is a long time in the span of living memory and almost an entire generation has grown that has no personal linkage to that traumatic moment in the life of this country. But Bhutto, the mercurial prince of our politics, remains a pulsating point of reference in our national affairs. All of us had - and have - a Bhutto of our own.
I find it difficult to summarise my thoughts in this brief write-up because of my personal involvement with the events of that period as a journalist and columnist. And writing about Bhutto was never easy because of his multitudinous character and his political role in an era of momentous developments. As I have said earlier, he remains a thread of scarlet in the drab fabric of our public life. Operating at various different levels, he was essentially an instrument of passion in our politics and that passion is hard to be erased from our collective consciousness.
Just as his passionate admirers have to be aware of some of his failings as a ruling politician, his equally passionate detractors must acknowledge the brilliance that he masterly invested in the service of this nation. He was the only charismatic leader to have emerged in our post-independence history and the party that he founded has survived the unending and brutal opposition by the establishment. Yet, the establishment itself is indebted to his role as the father of the nuclear programme and as the leader who injected hope and a sense of renewal at the darkest moment in our history in December 1971.
However, the idea here is not to go into the details of Bhutto’s remarkably eventful life and his complex influence on Pakistan’s destiny. Today, we are reminded, in particular, of not so much his life, as his death. We need to remember that he, a former prime minister, was the only man of high political stature to have been executed in the entire history of Pakistan, in spite of the fact that this history is replete with gross derelictions of all kinds, including subversion of the constitution. And it is also tainted with so many political murders.
On this anniversary of Bhutto’s execution, we should underline the need for the establishment as well as the political class to make a fresh effort to come to terms with the life and death of Bhutto. The Bhutto phenomenon should be understood in the context of our present wanderings in political wilderness. The Pakistan People’s Party of Benazir Bhutto must also ponder the role that it should play at a time when the system is so thoroughly corrupted and is so devoid of creativity. Benazir has inherited her father’s charisma, and such is the power of this inheritance that she has twice defeated the machinations of the establishment to become the prime minister of Pakistan.
Whether the PPP can be rejuvenated or not is a separate subject but it may be instructive to recall the initial promise of this party in the late sixties. The times, surely, have changed. Still, the radical change that Bhutto had brought about at that time is a unique chapter in our history. It will be difficult for those who did not witness that unprecedented popular movement to have any idea of what it was. At that time, Bhutto represented the immortal yearnings of the ordinary people of this country for change and progress. He was the first and, remains so far, the only leader who awakened the masses and planted the seed of hope in their hearts. Has that hope survived the depredations of more than a quarter century?
Indeed, that mobilisation is the soul of the Bhutto phenomenon. Results of the elections of 1970 were a revolution of a kind. Though many aspirations kindled at that time were somewhat betrayed in later years, that initial investment has not totally been exhausted. We should recognise that conditions in which Bhutto assumed power, and then governed the country, were exceptional. The manner, in which he rose to the occasion, as I have said, is a demonstration of what leadership can achieve in a period of national distress. It was his great achievement that in a short time, it seemed business as usual.
By the way, some of the most touching memories of Bhutto are situated in that address to the nation he made late at night on December 20, 1971. In that speech, he had said that he would “like to move the mountains, to change the course of history”. This is the challenge that belongs to our present leaders. The party that Bhutto had founded and its leader, Benazir Bhutto, are particularly obliged to take up the gauntlet. But we are also reminded, with a sense of regret, that there is no other leader of Bhutto’s brilliance and intellectual vigour.
Thoughts about Bhutto’s death, and about the last year of his life that he spent in a death cell, inevitably remind you of General Zia-ul-Haq and what he did to our polity. While Bhutto was very much an enigmatic figure, there should be no confusion about the dark legacy of Zia. The present establishment is carrying that burden in its strivings against religious extremism and terrorism. That it can still honour Zia’s son with a place in the federal cabinet and maintain hostility towards Bhutto’s party is an indication of the inherent attitude of this establishment towards the concept of a democratic dispensation in this country.
At some level, Bhutto’s execution was part of a grand design to discredit politicians. If the most brilliant of them with such a large popular following could be treated in that fashion, the rest could hardly be inclined to defy the powers that be. Hence the tradition of collaboration in our public life. It is always easy to become ‘patriots’ by joining the king’s party. Unfortunately, Bhutto’s execution was possible only with the connivance of some members of the higher judiciary. At least in this respect, a new judgment on how that trial was conducted is very much in order. Bhutto’s detractors may still have some arguments that are valid but no sane and sensible person can deny the fact that Zia had planned the execution for his own political purposes.
Whether a proper juridical review of Bhutto’s case is possible or not, this anniversary does make us think of the tragic event that took place twenty-five years ago. Even though it is difficult to relate to the Bhutto phenomenon without encountering deeply personal responses, its decisive influence cannot be rejected. Here was a great drama, surpassing the passion of a Greek tragedy. I find it interesting that most of his admirers often cherish the memories of the time when he was out of power; while those who oppose him can only recall the time he was in power.
In any case, all these memories have to be preserved because they constitute the raw material of a history we have not properly recorded or understood. Let me conclude with a quotation from Milan Kundera: “Man’s struggle against power is memory’s struggle against forgetting”. Let us not forget.
The writer is a staff member
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