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She
is the granddaughter of Pakistan's most charismatic leader, Zulfikar
Ali Bhutto, and daughter of the tragically martyred Mir Murtaza
Bhutto. Her stepmother, Murtaza's tenacious widow, who took on the
mantle of his faction of the PPP(SB), is Ghinwa Bhutto, and her
aunt is Benazir Bhutto, who became the first ever woman Prime Minister
of an Islamic state. So, is Fatima Bhutto another face to watch
out for in Pakistan's political arena? Very likely, given the Bhutto
gene pool!
Fatima Bhutto's maturity belies her youth. She was only 15
when her first book, a collection of poems, Whispers in the Desert,
was published. That was dedicated to her father. And now, six years
later, while studying at Columbia University, USA, Fatima has launched
a website in memory of her father, Murtaza and his companions, Ashiq
Jatoi, Yar Mohammad Baloch, Sajjad Haider, Wajahat Jokhio, Sattar
Rajpur and Rahim Brohi, who were slain with him on the night of
September 20, 1996 by policemen in what many believe was a staged
encounter.
The site, www.murtazabhutto.net, essentially focuses on the murder
and the official cover-up. Additionally, the site also carries biographies
of the deceased. Especially touching is that of Ashiq Jatoi's, whose
last words in the diary he kept are quoted. It reads, "It is
not what happens to me that matters. It is how I behave while it
is happening to me that matters. Cool mind, warm heart, clean hands."
Not that the same can be said about the accused, all of whom have
either been acquitted, allowed out on bail, sought exile abroad,
set free - even granted promotions in their respective departments!
If not for Fatima's determination, the Murtaza murder file would,
in all probability, have been consigned like those of numerous other
high profile assassinations and mysterious deaths in Pakistan's
chequered history, to a dusty shelf in some unconcerned official's
office.
Murtaza might be gone, but his daughter has ensured his memory will
linger.
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