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THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Democracy is the best revenge
DECEMBER 27, 2009, 6:33 P.M. ET
By ASIF ALI ZARDARI
Two years ago the world stopped for me and for my children.
Pakistan was shaken to its core and all but came apart.
Women everywhere lost one of their greatest symbols of equality.
And Islam, our great religion, lost its modern face.
On Dec. 27, 2007, my wife, Benazir Bhutto, was assassinated.
She was the bravest person I have ever known, and the second
anniversary of her death is an appropriate occasion to reflect
upon what she achieved for our country, and how her legacy
must be preserved against those who would return Pakistan
to darkness.
Twice elected prime minister of Pakistan, Benazir had an
immense impact. She stood up and defeated the forces of
military dictatorship. She freed all political prisoners.
She ended press censorship. She legalized trade and student
unions, built 46,000 primary and secondary schools and appointed
the first female judges in our history. And she showed the
women of Pakistan and the world that they must accept no
limits on their ability and opportunity to learn, to grow
and to lead in modern society.
The target of two assassination attempts by Osama bin Laden
in the 1990s, Benazir repeatedly warned a skeptical world
of the impending danger from extremists and militants. In
her last campaign—even on the very day of her death, by
the hands of such extremists—she mobilized and rallied the
people of Pakistan against the terrorist threat.
View Full Image
Associated Press
Bhutto supporters in Lahore, Pakistan mark the two-year
anniversary of her assassination yesterday.
Benazir's murderers didn't kill her dreams. On the day we
buried her, even as her supporters cried out for revenge,
we reminded our party and country that, in her own words,
"democracy is the greatest revenge." And then
we led the Pakistan People's Party to victory in the elections.
Since then, fulfilling the electoral manifesto she wrote,
the nation's economy, which had been left in shambles by
the priorities of a decade of dictatorship, has been stabilized
and revitalized. Food shortages have ended. Power shortages
have diminished. We have adopted a national curriculum for
the first time in history to challenge the spread of political
madrassas. Constitutional reforms are being finalized which
will rid Pakistan of the undemocratic provisions inserted
by military dictators that expanded the power of the presidency
at the expense of parliament.
Benazir Bhutto died confronting the forces of tyranny and
terrorism, and Pakistan remains committed to the struggle
that she led. We have reclaimed Swat and Malakand from the
militants and rehabilitated the displaced persons back into
their homes. We have taken the fight against militants to
other areas, including South Waziristan in our Federally
Administered Tribal Areas, and to our major cities, and
we will win this war against them.
We will not let militants violently impose their political
agenda on the people. Political ownership of the war against
terrorism rests with the people of Pakistan for the first
time. We are in the front trenches of this war while the
community of nations stands with us.
Much has been accomplished, but it has not been easy for
my nation, for my party or for my family. The forces in
Pakistan that have resisted change, modernity and democracy
for 30 years still attempt to derail progress.
Some of these forces who were allied with dictatorship in
the past now hope that the judicial process can undo the
will of a democratic electorate and destabilize the country.
A litany of ancient charges of corruption—the modus operandi
of past plots against every democratically elected government
in Pakistan—now threatens to undermine the legitimacy of
our government.
Those that will not stand with us against terrorism stand
against us in the media. I have spent almost 12 years in
prison on trumped up charges never proven, even by a court
system manipulated by dictators and despots. But like Benazir,
I refuse to be intimidated.
So let the legal process move forward. Those of us who have
fought for democracy against dictatorship for decades do
not fear justice; we embrace it.
My ministers, my party, leaders of other parties and thousands
of civil servants across our nation will defend themselves
in the courts if necessary. Democracy has come a long way
in Pakistan, and the People's Party has always been at the
vanguard of the fight. In 1979 Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, Benazir's
father and the elected prime minister of Pakistan was executed
under a smokescreen that history now characterizes as a
judicial murder. Two decades later Benazir was indicted
on fabricated charges on the orders of her political enemies
then in power. When tape recordings of these government
officials ordering the courts to fabricate evidence and
false witness against Benazir were made public, these trumped-up
charges were dismissed.
Those of us who have been victims of dictatorship in the
past believe in the rule of law and have faith in the judicial
process. We believe, in the words of my wife, that "time,
justice and the forces of history are on our side."
We have not come this far in our democratic struggle to
fail. In this struggle, I am inspired by my father-in-law,
Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, who said that he "would rather
die at the hands of dictators than be killed by history."
Mr. Zardari is president of Pakistan.
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