Zulfikar Ali Bhutto
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto | |
---|---|
ذُوالفِقار علی بُھٹّو | |
Sharifuddin Pirzada | |
In office 20 December 1971 – 28 March 1977 | |
President | Fazal Ilahi Chaudhry |
Preceded by | Yahya Khan |
Succeeded by | Aziz Ahmed |
Minister of Commerce | |
In office 28 October 1958 – 16 January 1960 | |
Preceded by | Abdur Rashid Khan |
Succeeded by | Md. Hafizur Rahman |
Personal details | |
Born | Pakistani (1947–1979) | 5 January 1928
Political party | Pakistan People's Party |
Other political affiliations | Convention Muslim League (before 1967)[1] |
Spouse(s) |
Shireen Amir Begum
(m. 1943, separated)Nusrat Ispahani (m. 1951)Husna Sheikh (before 1979) |
Children | Benazir Bhutto Murtaza Bhutto Sanam Bhutto Shahnawaz Bhutto |
Parents |
|
Relatives | See Bhutto family |
Alma mater | University of California, Berkeley Christ Church, Oxford Lincoln's Inn |
Profession | Lawyer, politician |
Nickname | Quaid-e-Awam ("the People's Leader") |
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto[a] (5 January 1928 – 4 April 1979) was a Pakistani barrister, politician, and statesman. He served as the fourth president of Pakistan from 1971 to 1973 and later as the ninth prime minister of Pakistan from 1973 to 1977. Bhutto founded the Pakistan People's Party (PPP) and served as its chairman until his execution.
Born in
During his presidency, Bhutto secured the release of 93,000
Despite winning the
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Elections
President of Pakistan
Biography Gallery: Picture, Sound, Video |
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Early life
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto belonged to a
In 1949, as a sophomore, Bhutto transferred to the
Political career
In 1957, Bhutto became the youngest member of Pakistan's delegation to the United Nations. He addressed the
Foreign Minister
Bhutto, a
Bhutto signed the
In 1962, as territorial differences escalated between India and China, Beijing considered staging
On Bhutto's counsel, Ayub Khan launched
During his term, Bhutto formulated aggressive geostrategic and foreign policies against India.[19] In 1965, Bhutto received information from his friend Munir Ahmad Khan about the status of India's nuclear program. Bhutto stated, "Pakistan will fight, fight for a thousand years. If India builds the (atom) bomb, Pakistan will eat grass or leaves, even go hungry, but we (Pakistan) will get one of our own (atom bomb).... We (Pakistan) have no other choice!" In his 1969 book The Myth of Independence, Bhutto argued for the necessity of Pakistan acquiring a fission weapon and starting a deterrence program to stand up to industrialized states and a nuclear-armed India. He developed a manifesto outlining the program's development and selected Munir Ahmad Khan to lead it.[19]
Pakistan People's Party
After resigning as foreign minister, large crowds gathered to hear Bhutto's speech upon his arrival in Lahore on 21 June 1967. Riding a wave of anger against Ayub, Bhutto traveled across Pakistan, delivering political speeches. In October 1966, Bhutto explicitly outlined the beliefs of his new party: "Islam is our faith, democracy is our policy, socialism is our economy. All power to the people."[20]
On 30 November 1967, at the Lahore residence of
Mubashir Hassan, an engineering professor at
1970 elections
Following Ayub's resignation, his successor, General
Fall of East Pakistan
Yahya started a negotiating conference in Dhaka, presumably to reach a settlement between Bhutto and Mujib. The discussion was expected to be "fruitful" until the president left for West Pakistan on the evening of 25 March. On that night of 25 March 1971, the army initiated Operation Searchlight, which had been planned by the military junta of Yahya Khan, presumably to suppress political activities and movements by the Bengalis. Mujib was arrested and imprisoned in West Pakistan. Genocide and atrocities by the military against the Bengali population were alleged during the operation.[23][24][25]
Bhutto stayed in
Bhutto was the country's first civilian chief martial law administrator since 1958, as well as the country's first civilian president.[20] With Bhutto assuming control, the leftists and democratic socialists entered the country's politics and later emerged as power players in the country's politics. And, for the first time in the country's history, the leftists and democratic socialists had a chance to administer the country with the popular vote and widely approved exclusive mandate, given to them by the West's population in the 1970s elections.[20]
In a reference written by Kuldip Nayar in his book "Scoop! Inside Stories from the Partition to the Present", Nayar noted that "Bhutto's releasing of Mujib did not mean anything to Pakistan's policy as in if there was no liberation war.[27] Bhutto's policy, and even as of today, the policy of Pakistan continues to state that "she will continue to fight for the honor and integrity of Pakistan. East Pakistan is an inseparable and unseverable part of Pakistan".[27] When Bhutto set about rebuilding Pakistan, he stated his intention was to "rebuild confidence and rebuild hope for the future".
Presidency (1971–1973)
A Pakistan International Airlines flight was sent to fetch Bhutto from New York City, where he was presenting Pakistan's case before the United Nations Security Council on the East Pakistan Crisis. Bhutto returned home on 18 December 1971. On 20 December, he was taken to the President House in Rawalpindi, where he took over two positions from Yahya Khan, one as president and the other as the first civilian Chief Martial Law Administrator. Thus, he was the first civilian Chief Martial Law Administrator of the dismembered Pakistan. By the time Bhutto had assumed control of what remained of Pakistan, the nation was completely isolated, angered, and demoralized. Bhutto addressing the nation through radio and television said:
My dear countrymen, my dear friends, my dear students, labourers, peasants... those who fought for Pakistan... We are facing the worst crisis in our country's life, a deadly crisis. We have to pick up the pieces, very small pieces, but we will make a new Pakistan, a prosperous and progressive Pakistan, a Pakistan free of exploitation, a Pakistan envisaged by the
Quaid-e-Azam.[28]
As president, Bhutto faced mounting challenges on both internal and foreign fronts. The trauma was severe in Pakistan, a psychological setback and emotional breakdown for Pakistan. The two-nation theory—the theoretical basis for the creation of Pakistan—lay discredited, and Pakistan's foreign policy collapsed when no moral support was found anywhere, including long-standing allies such as the U.S. and China. However, this is disputed even by Bangladeshi academics who insist that the two-nation theory was not discredited.[29] Since her creation, the physical and moral existence of Pakistan was in great danger. On the internal front, Baloch, Sindhi, Punjabi, and Pashtun nationalisms were at their peak, calling for their independence from Pakistan. Finding it difficult to keep Pakistan united, Bhutto launched full-fledged intelligence and military operations to stamp out any separatist movements. By the end of 1978, these nationalist organizations were brutally quelled by Pakistan Armed Forces.[30]
Bhutto immediately placed Yahya Khan under house arrest, brokered a ceasefire, and ordered the release of Sheikh Mujib, who was held prisoner by the Pakistan Army. To implement this, Bhutto reversed the verdict of Mujib's earlier court-martial trial, in which Brigadier-General
Bhutto visited India to meet Prime Minister
Nuclear weapons program
Bhutto, the founder of Pakistan's atomic bomb program, earned the title "Father of Nuclear Deterrence" due to his administration and aggressive leadership of this program.
In October 1965, as the Foreign Minister, Bhutto visited Vienna, where nuclear engineer
Pakistan was exposed to a kind of "nuclear threat and blackmail" unparalleled elsewhere.... If the world's community failed to provide political insurance to Pakistan and other countries against nuclear blackmail, these countries would be constrained to launch atomic bomb programs of their own!... Assurances provided by the United Nations were not "Enough!"...
— Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, statement written in Eating Grass, source[38]
Roughly two weeks after the
Before the 1970s, nuclear deterrence was well-established under the government of Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy, but it was entirely peaceful and dedicated to civilian power needs. Bhutto, in his book The Myth of Independence in 1969, wrote:
If Pakistan restricts or suspends her
science and technology.... Our problem in its essence is how to obtain such a weapon in time before the crisis begins...— Zulfikar Ali Bhutto[39]
After India's nuclear test – codenamed
The militarization of the
Wanting a capable administrator, Bhutto sought Lieutenant-General
Because Pakistan, under Bhutto, was not a signatory or party to the
Munir Ahmad Khan and
In a thesis presented in The Myth of Independence, Bhutto argued that nuclear weapons would enable India to deploy its
By the time Bhutto was ousted, this crash programme had fully matured in terms of technical development and scientific efforts.
We (Pakistan)...know that (Israel) and (South Africa) have full nuclear capability—a Christian, Jewish and Hindu civilization have this [nuclear] capability ... the Islamic civilization is without it, but the situation (is) about to change!...
— Zulfikar Ali Bhutto—called for a test from his jail cell, 1978[46]
Prime Minister of Pakistan
History of Pakistan |
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Timeline |
Bhutto was sworn in as the prime minister of the country on 14 August 1973, after securing 108 votes in a house of 146 members.
Constitutional reforms
Bhutto is considered the main architect of the 1973 constitution as part of his vision to lead Pakistan toward parliamentary democracy.[49] One of the major achievements in Bhutto's life was the drafting of Pakistan's first-ever consensus constitution for the country.[49] Bhutto supervised the promulgation of the 1973 constitution, triggering an unstoppable constitutional revolution through his politics wedded to the emancipation of the downtrodden masses, giving them a voice in Parliament and introducing radical changes in the economic sphere for their benefit.[49]
During his time in office, the government carried out seven major amendments to the 1973 Constitution.
Industrial reforms
The Bhutto government implemented a series of reforms in the industrial sector, focusing on nationalization and improving workers' rights.[52] The initial phase, in 1972, involved the nationalization of basic industries such as steel, chemical, and cement.[52] A significant move occurred on 1 January 1974, when Bhutto nationalized all banks.[52] The final step in this sequence was the nationalization of all flour, rice, and cotton mills across the country.[52] However, this nationalization process didn't meet Bhutto's expectations and faced challenges.[52] Many nationalized units were small businesses that didn't qualify as industrial units, leading to adverse consequences for numerous small businessmen and traders who were either ruined, displaced, or left unemployed.[52] In hindsight, nationalization resulted in significant losses to both the national treasury and the people of Pakistan.[52]
The Bhutto government established an extensive network of both rural and urban schools, including approximately 6,500 elementary schools, 900 middle schools, 407 high schools, 51 intermediate colleges, and 21 junior colleges.[48] Departing from the Western education system, Bhutto returned most literature to the Western world and encouraged local academicians to publish books in their respective fields. Although these local books were made more affordable to the public, these reforms stirred controversy. Bhutto's government mandated the inclusion of Islamic and Pakistan studies in school curricula. Book banks were introduced in most institutions, and over 400,000 copies of textbooks were supplied to students.[48]
Bhutto is credited with establishing the world-class
After the 1977 election, plans were in place to add seven thousand new hostel seats to the existing accommodation. In 1975, Bhutto acknowledged the challenges and shortcomings faced by college students in many existing hostels. Consequently, he directed the provision of fans, water coolers, and pay telephones in each hostel as quickly as physically possible.[48]
Land, flood and agriculture reforms
During his tenure as prime minister, several land reforms were introduced.
Bhutto strongly advocated empowering small farmers, asserting that a weak and demoralized farming community would jeopardize Pakistan's agricultural strength. He believed that farmers needed to feel psychologically secure for the country to achieve self-sufficiency in food.
Economic policy
Bhutto implemented
Bhutto's nationalisation policies aimed to empower workers, giving them control over the means of production and protecting small businesses.
Bhutto's departure from certain socialist policies greatly displeased his democratic socialist alliance and many in the
As part of his investment policies, Bhutto established the National Development Finance Corporation (NDFC) in July 1973, with an initial government investment of 100 million PRs. Initially aimed at financing public sector industrial enterprises, its charter was later modified to provide finance to the private sector as well. The NDFC is currently the largest development finance institution in Pakistan, engaging in diversified activities in industrial financing and investment banking. Forty-two projects financed by NDFC have contributed Rs. 10,761 million to Pakistan's GDP, generating Rs. 690 million in after-tax profits and creating 40,465 jobs. By the mid-1990s, NDFC had a pool of resources amounting to US$878 million. The Bhutto government increased the level of investment, both private and public, in the economy from less than Rs. 7,000 million in 1971–72 to more than Rs. 17,000 million in 1974–75.
Banking and Export expansion
Banking reforms were introduced to provide more opportunities to small farmers and businesses, such as mandating that 70% of institutional lending should be for small landholders of 12.5 acres or less—a revolutionary idea at a time when banks primarily served privileged classes.[58] The number of bank branches increased by 75% from December 1971 to November 1976, rising from 3,295 to 5,727.[57] This move by Bhutto was one of the most radical, expanding bank infrastructure to cover all towns and villages with a population of 5,000, following the nationalisation of banks.[57]
By the end of Bhutto's government, the concentration of wealth had declined compared to the height of the Ayub Khan era when 22 families owned 66% of industrial capital and controlled banking and 97% of insurance.[58]
Measures taken in the first few months of 1972 set a new framework for the revival of the economy. The diversion of trade from East Pakistan to international markets was completed within a short period. By 1974, exports exceeded one billion dollars, showing a 60% increase over the combined exports of East and West Pakistan before separation. This growth was achieved and benefited from during the major 1973 oil crisis and in the middle of a global recession. The national income of Pakistan increased by 15%, and industrial production rose by as much as 20% in four years.[48]
Balochistan
Military operation
Following the secession of East Pakistan, calls for the independence of
In January 1973, Bhutto ordered the Pakistan Armed Forces to suppress a rising insurgency in the province of Balochistan. He dismissed the governments in Balochistan and the
Iraqi intervention
The government announced the Iraqi plan to further dismember the country, and Bhutto's successful diplomatic offensive against Iraq isolated Saddam internationally with global condemnation.[66] This incident caused Pakistan to support Iran during the Iran–Iraq War in the 1980s.[66]
Aftermath
In order to avoid a replay of the East-Pakistan war, Bhutto launched economic and political reforms in the midst of the conflict. The Bhutto government abolished the feudal system, despite opposition from feudal lords who continued to appropriate a generous share of government developmental funds.[citation needed] Gradually, tribesmen started coming out of the Sardars' quarantine.[citation needed] Modern amenities, such as medical aid, automobiles for passenger transport, and schooling for children, became available in the interior of Baluchistan for the first time since 1947.[citation needed] The Bhutto government also constructed 564 miles of new roads, including the key link between Sibi and Maiwand, creating new trade and commerce centres.[citation needed]
Passport reforms
The Bhutto government granted the right of a
Labour policy and social security
Bhutto's government implemented comprehensive labour reforms, introducing conditions on worker dismissals and establishing Labour Courts for swift grievance redressal. A scheme for workers' participation in management was introduced, ensuring 20% participation at the factory level. The government abolished workers' contribution to the Social Security Fund, shifting the burden to employers. Compensation rates under the Worker's Compensation Act were increased.[48]
In 1972, the government initially provided old age benefits through group insurance, enhanced compensation rates, and gratuity. To address immediate needs, a pension scheme was introduced, offering Rs. 75 per month after retirement at 55 for men and 50 for women with 15 years of insurable employment. This applied to establishments employing ten or more workers with monthly wages up to Rs. 1,000, including benefits for skilled workers invalid after five years of insurable employment.[48]
Contrary to the Western model, Bhutto's government aimed to relieve workers of the financial burden, funding the scheme through a 5% contribution from employers based on the wage bill.[48]
Foreign policy
After assuming power, Bhutto aimed to diversify Pakistan's relations, leading to its exit from
Bhutto pursued a peace agreement, the
Bhutto's extensive knowledge, intelligence, and keen awareness of
East Asia
Since the 1960s, Bhutto had been anti-SEATO and preferred a non-aligned policy.[75] Soon after assuming office, Bhutto took a lengthy foreign trip to Southeast Asia, seeking closer relations with Vietnam, Thailand, Laos, Burma, and North Korea.[75] His policy largely followed tight relations with China, normalized relationships with the Soviet Union, built an Islamic bloc, and advocated the creation of a new economic alliance benefiting third and second world countries.[75]
All of these initiatives and implications had disastrous effects on Japan, prompting Japan to oppose Bhutto, although Bhutto was a great admirer of Japan, even though Japan was not a constituent part of Bhutto's foreign policy.
In Bhutto's view, Japan had been under the United States' influence, and a much bigger role of Japan in Asia would only benefit American interests in the region.[75] By the 1970s, Japan completely lost its momentum in Pakistan as Pakistan followed a strict independent policy.[75] Bhutto envisioned Pakistan's new policy as benefiting economic relations rather than the military alliance, which also affected Japan's impact on Pakistan.[75] However, much of the foreign policy efforts were reverted by General Zia-ul-Haq, and ties were finally restored after Bhutto's execution.[75]
Arab world and Israel
Bhutto sought to improve Pakistan's ties with the Arab world and sided with the Arab world during the Arab-Israeli conflict.
In early 1977, Bhutto decided to use
United States and Soviet Union
In 1974, India carried out a nuclear test, codenamed Smiling Buddha, near Pakistan's eastern border. Bhutto unsuccessfully lobbied for the United States to impose economic sanctions on India.[78] However, at the request of Bhutto, Pakistan's Ambassador to the United States convened a meeting with Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. Kissinger told Pakistan's ambassador to Washington that the test is "a fait accompli and that Pakistan would have to learn to live with it", although he was aware this was "a little rough" on the Pakistanis.[78] In 1976, the ties were further severed with Bhutto as Bhutto had continued to administer the research on weapons, and in 1976, in a meeting with Bhutto and Kissinger, Kissinger had told Bhutto, "that if you [Bhutto] do not cancel, modify, or postpone the Reprocessing Plant Agreement, we will make a horrible example of you".[79] The meeting was ended by Bhutto as he had replied: For my country's sake, for the sake of the people of Pakistan, I did not succumb to that blackmailing and threats.[79]
After this meeting, Bhutto intensified Pakistan's foreign policy towards a more neutral stance, aligning with the
Though
Despite Carter imposing an embargo on Pakistan, Bhutto persisted in acquiring materials for Pakistan's
Afghanistan and Central Asia
In 1972, Bhutto initially attempted to forge friendly ties with Afghanistan, but these efforts were rebuffed in 1973.
By 1976, Daud grew concerned about his country's overdependence on the Soviet Union and the rising insurgency. Bhutto's three-day state visit to Afghanistan in June 1976 was followed by Daud Khan's five-day visit to Pakistan in August 1976. An agreement on the resumption of air communications between Afghanistan and Pakistan was reached on 2 March 1977, signaling improved relations.[88] Bhutto and Daud exchanged official visits to pressure Afghanistan to accept the Durand Line as the permanent border.[82] However, these developments were interrupted by Bhutto's removal and Daud Khan's overthrow in a military coup shortly after.[82] Western experts considered Bhutto's policy astute in addressing the border question, increasing pressure on Afghanistan and likely contributing to the Afghan government's move towards accommodation. Deputy Afghan Foreign Minister Abdul Samad Ghaus also admitted that, before the compromise, Afghanistan had been heavily involved inside Pakistan.[82]
Downfall and overthrow
Popular unrest
Bhutto faced mounting criticism and growing unpopularity during his term. Initially targeting opposition leader
Dissidence grew within the PPP, and the murder of dissident leader
On 8 January 1977, the opposition coalesced into the
Military coup
On 3 July 1977, General Khalid Mahmud Arif secretly met with Bhutto, revealing that a coup was being planned in the General Combatant Headquarters (GHQ).[63] General Arif urged Bhutto to "rush the negotiation with the PNA before it's too late."[63] Growing political and civil disorder led Bhutto to engage in talks with PNA leaders, resulting in an agreement to dissolve the assemblies and hold fresh elections under a government of national unity.[94] However, on 5 July 1977, Bhutto and his cabinet members were arrested by troops under the command of General Zia.[31] Despite Bhutto reaching an agreement with the opposition, the coup took place on the pretext of unrest.[92]
Bhutto had intelligence within the Army, and officers like Major-General Tajamül Hussain Malik remained loyal to him until the end.[92] Nevertheless, General Zia-ul-Haq initiated a training program with officers from the Special Air Service (SAS).[92] Many of Bhutto's loyal officers were ordered to attend the first course.[92] Senior officers' classes were delayed until midnight, and none were allowed to leave until late in the evening before the coup, during which arrangements were made.[92]
General Zia declared martial law, suspended the constitution, dissolved all assemblies, and promised elections within ninety days. Zia ordered the arrest of senior PPP and PNA leaders but assured elections in October. Bhutto was released on 29 July and received a warm welcome from supporters in Larkana. He toured Pakistan, delivering speeches to large crowds and planning his political comeback. Bhutto was arrested again on 3 September and released on bail on 13 September. Fearing another arrest, he appointed his wife, Nusrat, as president of the Pakistan People's Party. Bhutto was imprisoned on 16 September, and many PPP leaders, including Dr. Mubashir Hassan, were arrested and disqualified from contesting elections. Observers noted that when Bhutto was removed from power in July 1977, thousands of Pakistanis cheered and celebrated.[95]
Trial and execution
On 5 July 1977, General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq led a military coup, removing Bhutto from power and detaining him for a month. Zia promised new elections within 90 days but continuously postponed them, asserting that Bhutto's party wouldn't return to power if he participated.
Upon release, Bhutto toured the country, addressing adulatory crowds of PPP supporters. Banned from train travel due to delays caused by these gatherings, Bhutto's last visit to Multan marked a turning point. Despite administration efforts to block the gathering, the crowd's size led to disorder, providing a pretext for Bhutto's arrest, claiming it was necessary for his safety.
On 3 September, Bhutto was arrested again, charged with authorizing the murder of a political opponent in March 1974.
Arraigned before the
Death sentence and appeal
On 18 March 1978, Bhutto was pronounced guilty of murder and was sentenced to death.
Devastated, Pirzada relayed the news to Bhutto, disclosing General Zia-ul-Haq's intentions.
Chief Justice S. Anwarul Haq, despite his close ties to Zia, presided over the trial and even served as Acting President when Zia was abroad. Bhutto's legal team successfully secured his right to conduct his own defense before the Supreme Court. On 18 December 1978, Bhutto appeared in public before a crowded courtroom in Rawalpindi. Having spent 9 months on death row, he had allegedly endured 25 days without fresh water at that point. Bhutto addressed the court for four days, delivering his statements without the aid of notes.
I did not kill that man. My God is aware of it. I am big enough to admit if I had done it, that admission would have been less of an ordeal and humiliation than this barbarous trial which no self respecting man can endure. I am a Muslim. A Muslim's fate is in the hands of God Almighty. I can face Him with a clear conscience and tell Him that I rebuilt His Islamic State of Pakistan from ashes into a respectable Nation. I am entirely at peace with my conscience in this black hole of Kot Lakhpat. I am not afraid of death. You have seen what fires I have passed through.
— Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, My Dearest Daughter: A letter from the Death Cell, [104]
The appeal concluded on 23 December 1978. On 6 February 1979, the Supreme Court voted 4-3, delivering a guilty verdict.[105] Bhutto's defender, Ramsey Clark, noted that during the appeal, "not one witness was re‐examined, nor did the court rectify" what he called "the glaring defects of the lower court's proceedings." Clark also highlighted that two of the Supreme Court's nine justices were absent from the decision, both showing signs of having been forced to not participate. One judge who had earlier remarked that he would not succumb to pressure retired in the fall of 1978 even though judicial propriety demanded that his leaving the Court be deferred until the conclusion of the case. The other judge was prevented from sitting in the Court from November because of an illness pronounced by a government‐appointed medical board.[98] If they had been present and voted not guilty in a 5-4 decision, Bhutto would have gone free. The Bhutto family had seven days to appeal, and the court granted a stay of execution while studying the petition. Appeals for clemency arrived from many heads of state by 24 February 1979 when the next court hearing began, but Zia dismissed them as "trade union activity" among politicians.
On 24 March 1979, the Supreme Court dismissed the appeal, and Zia upheld the death sentence. Bhutto was hanged at
During his imprisonment, Bhutto's children Murtaza and Benazir worked tirelessly to garner international support for their father's release.[110] Libya's Colonel Gaddafi dispatched his Prime Minister Abdus Salam Jalloud on an urgent mission to Pakistan for talks with the military establishment to secure Bhutto's release.[110] In a press conference, Jalloud revealed that Gaddafi had proposed to exile General Zia to Libya, and the Presidential aircraft awaited Bhutto at the Islamabad International Airport.[110] However, after a week at the airport, General Zia rejected Jalloud's request and upheld the death sentence.[110] Bhutto's execution shocked much of the Muslim world.[110] In his final speech before being hanged, Bhutto's last words were: "Oh Lord, help me for... I am innocent."[111]
Re-opening of the Bhutto trial
On 2 April 2011, 32 years after Bhutto's trial and execution, the
Immediately,
Following a series of hearings at the Supreme Court, the case was adjourned and eventually dismissed after the PPP sanctioned the suspension of Babar Awan on 2 May 2012.[117]
On 6 March 2024, a nine member SCP bench, headed by Chief Justice of Pakistan, Qazi Faez Isa, in response to the presidential reference provided an opinion that Bhutto was not provided a fair trial as mentioned in Article 4 and 9 of the Constitution of Pakistan.[118]
Personal life
Bhutto was a
Reception and legacy
Bhutto remains a complex and debated figure in Pakistan. While lauded for his nationalism, he faced criticism for suppressing political opponents. In 1971, when he assumed control, Pakistan was in disarray after a brutal civil war.[121] Critics blamed his socialist policies for economic setbacks, but Bhutto argued he addressed inequality from previous regimes.[21]
Controversially, some attribute Bhutto for the Bangladesh Liberation War. General Zia-ul-Haq released General Yahya Khan in 1977, who accused Bhutto of breaking Pakistan in 1971.[21][122] Bhutto also faces criticism for human-rights abuses in Baluchistan.[31]
Internationally, Bhutto is viewed positively as a secular internationalist. Despite domestic criticism, he remains Pakistan's most popular leader.[31] Bhutto successfully united parties for the 1973 constitution and pursued nuclear weapons, earning him the title of the father of Pakistan's nuclear program.[121][37][30]
While his legacy is contested, Bhutto is hailed for his accomplishments. Some, like former statesman Roedad Khan, commend his early achievements but note a decline later on.[123] His family, active in politics, faced tragedy with the assassinations of Benazir Bhutto in 2007 and Murtaza Bhutto in 1996.[124][125]
Despite criticisms, Bhutto remains a revered figure in Pakistan's collective memory, symbolizing influence in public, scientific, and political spheres.
Eponyms
These institutions stand as tributes to Bhutto's legacy:
- Shaheed Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto Institute of Science and Technology, Karachi, Sindh.
- ZA Bhutto Agricultural College, Larkana, Sindh.
- Zulfiqarabad, a planned city in Larkana District, named in memory of Bhutto.
Books
- Peace-Keeping by the United Nations, Pakistan Publishing House, Karachi, 1967
- Political Situation in Pakistan, Veshasher Prakashan, New Delhi, 1968
- The Myth of Independence, Oxford University Press, Karachi and Lahore, 1969
- The Great Tragedy, Pakistan People's Party, Karachi, 1971
- Marching Towards Democracy, (collections of speeches), 1972
- Politics of the People (speeches, statements and articles), 1948–1971
- The Third World: New Directions, Quartet Books, London, 1977
- My Pakistan, Biswin Sadi Publications, New Delhi, 1979
- If I am Assassinated, Vikas, New Delhi, 1979 on-line Archived 18 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine
- My Execution, Musawaat Weekly International, London, 1980
- New Directions, Narmara Publishers, London, 1980
See also
- Ghinwa Bhutto
- Nusrat Bhutto
- List of presidents of Pakistan
- List of prime ministers of Pakistan
- Movement for the Restoration of Democracy
Notes
- Urdu: ذُوالفِقار علی بُھٹّو; Sindhi: ذوالفقار علي ڀٽو
References
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Bibliography
- Bhutto, Zulfikar Ali (1969). The Myth of Independence. Oxford University Press.
- Raza, Syed Rasul (2008). Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto; The Architect of New Pakistan. Karachi, Sindh Province, Pakistan: Printwise publication. ISBN 978-969-8500-00-9.
External links
- Official web site of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto
- Biography with brief video clip from TV address on 18 November 1970
- Manifestos of Pakistan Peoples Party 1970 & 1977
- Zulfikar Ali Bhutto at Encyclopedia Sindhiana
- Farewell speech to the UN Security Council on 15 December 1971 on YouTube
- Interview of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto on YouTube