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All
assassinations have consequences, but few are as explosive as those
that have followed the murder of Benazir Bhutto on the evening of
December 27. The whole country has been rocked to its very foundation.
The killing of 61 people in the subsequent riots and damage worth
billions of rupees incurred to public and private property are just
one measure of the consequences of Bhutto's assassination. Worrisome
questions about the country's future dominate discussions in newspaper
columns and drawing rooms alike.
Much
of this mayhem was unavoidable, but still a lot could have been
prevented by timely administrative action and, more importantly,
by better handling of the immediate details of Ms Bhutto's murder.
Neither
happened. The police and the civil administration, in fact, the
entire district government system, went into a state of self-imposed
dysfunction. The decision-making machinery in Islamabad made a complete
hash of arguably the most important aspect of the tragedy: information
about how Benazir Bhutto was killed.
The
official response, which kept coming up, and at critical moments
defined public perceptions about the nature of her death, hovered
between futile fudging and clumsy cover-ups, leaving swathes of
misgivings about the truth of the matter.
No
doubt it was a dreary and confusing time and rage and criminals
stalked the land. But there was reasonably credible information
available about the sequence of events. It went something like this.
As Bhutto opened the iron-hood of her bullet-proof car to wave for
the last time to her party die-hards, she exposed herself to the
lurking assassin. He shot her through the head from a distance so
close that one guard clinging to the rear of her car made vain attempts
to jump onto him to prevent the crime from being committed. She
got hit, perhaps in the back of her head - perhaps in the brain
stem - and collapsed inside the car into the lap of Naheed Khan,
her personal secretary. Seconds later, a blast ripped through the
mass of people around and badly damaged the vehicle. Damaged but
not broken, the vehicle trundled towards Islamabad at the shrieking
directions of the inmates who feared the worst. Five kilometres
into the journey, Benazir Bhutto's companions, who also included
Makhdoom Amin Fahim, realised that Islamabad was too far away and
she needed immediate medical assistance. The staff at the Rawalpindi
General Hospital confirmed that Benazir Bhutto was dead upon arrival;
they confirmed that there were two bullet wounds in the neck and
one (which was actually the exit wound) in the head. When the doctors
were trying to revive her, there was not a single expert around
the operation table who had any hope of saving her. They were working
on a body that had gone cold long before they were called in.
A
timely filtering out of these details could have helped the government
hook up well with the shell-shocked leadership of the PPP. Instead,
what followed was a perplexing array of the most incredulous explanations.
The first salvo came from caretaker Interior Minister Lt. General
(retd.) Hamid Nawaz Khan who stated with supreme confidence that
Ms Bhutto had been killed in a suicide attack masterminded by terrorists
and that the bullets fired at her had not hit her. Then, on the
day of Ms Bhutto's burial, Dr Mussadiq, the principal and professor
of surgery at Rawalpindi Medical College, who led the team handling
the slain premier's body, held a press conference that shamed his
noble profession. He denied that there were any bullet wounds on
Ms Bhutto's body and that the one wound that was there had been
caused by some sharp object.
Then
came the king in this string of cruel jokes. Brigadier (retd.) Javed
Iqbal Cheema, spokesperson for the interior ministry and incharge
of the National Crisis Management Cell, gave a most detailed description
of what and who might have killed Ms Bhutto. He said it was Baitullah
Mehsud from the Waziristan region who had planned and executed the
killing through a suicide bomber, though she was actually killed
by a small metallic lever on the side of the hood of her car that
smashed her skull. Pictures of the blood-stained lever were made
available to the media to support the assertion. In making this
statement, Brig. Cheema was able to achieve the seemingly impossible
task of proving that her death was at once caused by both terrorism
and accident. He even played an audio tape in which a person was
heard congratulating another for doing a great job. The former was
supposed to be Baitullah Mehsud, the mastermind, while the latter
was the supervisor of the attack.
The
explanation was supposed to be a logical culmination of the incredible
claims of Dr Mussadiq about a sharp object knocking off the former
premier. But then the Toyota Motor Corporation threatened to sue
the government for making false statements about their prime product,
and videos of Ms Bhutto getting hit by the assassin's bullets popped
up on every domestic and international channel. When the camera
gave the lie to official versions, the government ran for cover
in the lousiest way imaginable. "Soldiers are not good at communication,"
was all that the interior minister could say to senior members of
the media in defence of his spokesman. The more tangible, but still
inadequate damage-control exercise included the acceptance of the
UK's assistance in probing the murder.
The
arrival of the Scotland Yard team in Pakistan, under much hype,
has changed little. The PPP, whose members furiously rejected the
initial official explanations, are still demanding a UN-mandated
investigation, underlining the complete breakdown of trust in the
government's sincerity in identifying the real killers. At any rate,
Scotland Yard are no magicians. They have to work with the given
forensic evidence. Regrettably, very little of that survives in
its original shape. The scene of the killing has been swept clean
(accidentally or because of sheer incompetence is what the official
explanation states); the medical record of Ms Bhutto's murder has
changed hands - it now lies with the government; her belongings
have gone through the purgatory of official custody and eyewitnesses
have been arranged by the police to describe the condition of her
security, who have testified to the "best possible arrangements
that were made to protect her." How efficacious and penetrating
Scotland Yard's findings are going to be under such circumstances,
is self-evident.
But even if the UK's super detectives are able to sift the grain
of truth from the chaff of contradictory claims, the inquiry would
not bring down political tempers. The perception among the PPP cadres
is that the government wants to dodge their demand: the truth of
Ms Bhutto's murder be told with a straight tongue. Numerous party
leaders have, out of hand, rejected statements by President General
(retd.) Musharraf that Baitullah Mehsud is behind the killing. They
believe that typically the government is playing the extremist card
to muddle the picture and to muster more international support and
money for the counter-terrorism effort.
Adding to their grief and anger are statements from their political
opponents, the Pakistan Muslim League-Q, that perhaps Ms Bhutto's
husband, and now the PPP's co-chairperson, Asif Ali Zardari has
a hand in the killing. What they find equally appalling is Musharraf's
version: had she not come out of the vehicle, she would have still
been alive.
Ms
Bhutto's assassination has bitterly, and perhaps permanently, divided
the national scene. The small window of opportunity that the government
had to win over the broken hearts of the Peoples Party, by truthfully
reconstructing the sequence of events, is now tightly closed. And,
perhaps, so is the door to political peace.
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