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In
the mournful environs of the Bhuttos' ancestral graveyard in Garhi
Khuda Bux sits an aging fakir who, oblivious to the marching crowds
around him, every five minutes shouts 'Jiye Bhutto' at the top of
his voice and then breaks down in loud sobs. The slogan, once a
pet refrain of PPP workers and leaders alike in public meetings,
now sounds like misfortune's ultimate gauntlet to the party leadership.
Having
lost Benazir Bhutto to an assassin's bullet, they now have to ensure
that 'Jiye Bhutto' remains a rallying cry for the party's broken
cadres.
So
far they have not done badly. Or so it seems. In the torturous aftermath
of Benazir Bhutto's tragic killing, when each one of them was drowned
in grief, the central leadership of the party has managed the transition.
New captain(s) Asif Ali Zardari and the renamed Bilawal Bhutto Zardari,
Ms Bhutto's husband and son, respectively, might not be the ideal
co-chairpersons to lead Pakistan's biggest political force, but
they are the only ones on whom a consensus of sorts has been arrived
at.
Party
insiders, and critics of the decision to appoint the duo, admit
that Ms Bhutto's political will to leave the reins of the party
to her husband does exist and that as much as they had deep reservations
about the arrangements, they realise that there was no other alternative.
"I
do not think Asif Ali Zardari or Bilawal Bhutto Zardari can ever
be the kind of leader Mohtarama was. But I also know that no one
can be. And then why fret about it when she in her lifetime, had
sanctioned it in writing. I have to respect the will because I have
seen it and because these were her last orders," says a member
of the PPP's central executive committee (CEC).
Others
who are more vocal in their bitterness about the party's top slot
going to Asif Ali Zardari, insist that Ms Bhutto never mentioned
her husband as her heir in any significant conversation about the
party's future. They suspect that Mr Zardari might have forced Ms
Bhutto to pen down the will, and she, in her weak moments as a faithful
wife, might have obliged.
"She
never wanted him to deal with the party directly; and when he came
out of jail and tried to use his brief stint in Lahore to call the
shots to party leaders, she immediately told him not to bother,"
says another member of the central executive committee. But whether
out of compulsion or out of choice, Ms Bhutto did allow Mr Zardari
considerable space in party affairs. In the critical time of the
award of party tickets, there are at least 16 cases where Mr Zardari's
opinion defined the choice even at the cost of the goodwill of party
loyalists. Ms Farahnaz Ispahani, wife of Hussain Haqqani, Bhutto
tormentor- turned-trusted ally, got the ticket, against the wishes
of Naheed Khan, Ms Bhutto's faithful friend, whose fretful return
of her ticket did not change her leader's decision.
At
the heart of these objections to the new arrangement to govern the
PPP sits a gnawing distrust of Asif Zardari by the party's diehard
supporters. Mr Zardari's personal conduct has bred a deep disenchantment
against him in a party that has never seen its future beyond Benazir
Bhutto.
"He
is seen as vengeful and politically naïve. He does not know
the party workers except a handful of his own favourites and does
not command the automatic respect that Ms Bhutto enjoyed effortlessly,"
says a local leader in Naudero, the ancestral village of Ms Bhutto.
These mixed fears of the loss of position, privilege, and access
to the party high command is the reason why many party eyes are
still looking towards Fatima Bhutto, the estranged niece of Benazir
Bhutto and daughter of her slain brother Mir Murtaza Bhutto.
A spitting image of Benazir in her younger days, Fatima Bhutto is
the eldest of the new Bhutto generation. She and her brother, Zulfikar
Bhutto, are seen by many as the true heirs of the Bhutto legacy
since they are the offsprings of a male Bhutto. Such chatter is
music to the ears of Ghinwa Bhutto, their mother, who for years
has delivered damning indictments of Benazir Bhutto for "stealing
the Bhutto throne and handing it over to the Zardaris."
While
grief-stricken and more respectful to Benazir Bhutto after her death
than she ever was in her life, Ghinwa Bhutto can barely hide her
contempt for the Zardari-Bilawal combine ruling the roost.
"We
cannot allow the Bhutto stamp to be hijacked by anyone. We would
consult the whole Bhutto family. The children are in touch. We would
bring in elders like Mumtaz Bhutto and we would bring the party
back to the genuine heirs. It is only a matter of time," she
says sitting in Al-Murtaza, the sprawling family home in Larkana.
But
these are vain hopes. The Bhutto stamp, a reference to the political
vote-bank of the PPP, is not going to shift towards Ghinwa Bhutto's
party just because Fatima Bhutto is penning kinder words about her
slain aunt in newspapers - a space that she consistently used to
deny her image as a true leader of the people of Pakistan.
Some
of Ms Bhutto's closest friends say that there was a time when she
wanted to reach out to Fatima Bhutto in spite of her mother, but
that was three years ago.
"She had practically
given up on the idea of engaging the family of her brother and never
mentioned them in any significant discussion about the party's future.
At any rate, Ghinwa Bhutto's politics is very dicey and, even now,
she is openly clamouring for further postponement of the elections
- the very opposite of what BB sahiba wanted. The party would be
pulled apart if someone tried to bring Ghinwa's family into the
equation," says a close confidante of the late Benazir Bhutto.
These
dangers to the party are real. The Zardaris are even more suspicious
of Mir Murtaza's party than PPP leaders. Asif Ali Zardari had a
running feud with Mir Murtaza, whose supporters openly accuse Mr
Zardari of planning his murder. Party sources confirm that Mr Zardari
had issued special instructions at Bhutto House, Ms Bhutto's abode
in Larkana, that Mir Murtaza's backers should be particularly searched
for weapons as they arrived in droves to participate in condolence
meetings. At one point Mr Zardari left the room where pro-Murtaza
family members were sitting on the hunch that perhaps some of them
had guns on them. It is inconceivable that such strained ties among
the elders - Ghinwa and Asif, who both are non-Bhuttos - shall improve
enough to allow a smooth third-generation transfer of leadership
of the party. The Asif-Bilawal combine is more or less a permanent
arrangement and unlikely to change bloodlessly in the near future.
And
so far the PPP has managed to stay together, and besides the perpetual
grumblings surrounding everything that Asif Ali Zardari does, or
does not do, there are no signs of mutinous thoughts gaining ground
within the party.
This
is primarily on account of the party's decision to contest the elections.
In Karachi, where much of the party leadership is now based, drawing
rooms are filled with chat about what these elections mean for the
party. The consensus view is that if it was not for the prospect
of elections, the party would have gone to the dogs of disintegration
by now.
"Heartless
though it may seem, it is a fact that the party's prospects of securing
a comprehensive victory in the coming elections are looking bright
only after the tragedy of our leader's assassination. The aftermath
of this incident has decimated the opposition and made our voters
and workers aggressive and combative. We are heartbroken personally,
but politically we have never felt more obliged to win as now. We
must honour Ms Bhutto through a resounding victory," says a
provincial ticket-holder from Sindh.
This motivation is moving, but is fraught with the danger of turning
into frustration and fury in case the anticipated victory is not
obtained or is denied. In Clifton, a small gathering of Peoples
Party leaders broached the subject for hours and reached the conclusion
that the biggest challenge for the party would be to take a stand
on agitation in case the elections are rigged.
"Right now the new party leadership is only following the script
that BB had created in her life: the manifesto, party tickets, the
campaign profile and even some rough priorities for the slots of
prime minister and chief ministers have all been marked. The new
leadership will face its toughest moment if circumstances demand
a clear-cut response to the denial of our legitimate victory at
the polls. The more hardline groups would clamour for a mass movement
while others would want a less problematic course of action. That
would test the mettle of the party leadership," says a member
of the central executive committee.
When Asif Ali Zardari was asked in an interview at Bhutto House
what sort of elections he anticipated, he spoke of rigging in definitive
terms and sounded a warning note to the government in the following
words: "If the government has any brains, it would listen to
us [on elections]." Privately, sources close to Mr Zardari
say that he would not think twice before calling for agitation in
case the PPP does not win.
But in Islamabad, that citadel of intrigue, the mood is half-jubilant
over the difficulties that the PPP is confronted with. Analyses
abound of how easy it is to now manage the PPP and possibly also
break it up into pieces to end its dominance in national politics.
The post-Benazir Bhutto possibilities are the most written about
subject on which intelligence war-gaming has already started.
However, the more thoughtful intriguers among the lot are aware
of at least one worry. Between now and the time when PPP's internal
problems might spill over, lies the crucial phase of elections.
The PPP is revved up and cadres in Sindh particularly are mad with
rage. If they are shortchanged in the elections, they can and will
create havoc. But to allow them to come to power is an option not
acceptable to the assorted leaders of PML-Q and even President General
(retd.) Pervez Musharraf. They trust Zardari less than they trusted
Benazir. Therein lies the fear that the real phase of instability
might just be beginning.
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