Teenage son to take on Benazir Bhutto’s legacy


(Times Online) – BENAZIR BHUTTO’S 19-year-old son Bilawal will be thrust into a dangerous spotlight today as Pakistan’s most powerful political dynasty prepares to pass the baton to the next generation.

Bilawal, a first-year undergraduate at Oxford University, is the heir to a blood-soaked legacy. He lost his mother to an assassin on Thursday; his uncles both died in suspicious circumstances; and his grandfather, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, was hanged in 1979 after being deposed from power.

Last night Britain’s foreign office confirmed that Benazir Bhutto met David Miliband, the foreign secretary, shortly before she returned to Pakistan from exile in October and warned him of a plot against her life. Bhutto and Miliband had spoken regularly on the telephone since that meeting and her concerns about her safety were passed on to the Pakistani authorities.

At 3pm today Pakistan time Bilawal will read out his dead mother’s political testament to leaders of the Pakistan People’s party (PPP), which his grandfather founded and the family has always controlled.

Zardari became known as Mr Ten Per Cent because of widespread allegations that he received kickbacks on government contracts.

Many in the party would prefer to see the PPP taken over by Makhdoom Amin Fahim, head of another feudal family, who ran the party while Bhutto was in exile.

The discussions took place amid growing controversy over how the 54-year-old former prime minister died.

PPP members insist that Bhutto was killed when a suicide bomber fired three shots at close range and then blew himself up. They have blamed President Musharraf’s government for not providing adequate security.

However, Brigadier Javed Cheema, of the interior ministry, told journalists that Bhutto fractured her skull by hitting the sunroof of her armoured car, a statement thought to be aimed at stopping her becoming a martyr.

The claim was denounced as “dangerous nonsense” by Sherry Rehman, the PPP information secretary, who was travelling in the car behind Bhutto and insisted she was shot in the neck.

Britain appeared to back the Musharraf government’s account. “We have no evidence to contradict the reports that are coming out of Pakistan,” said Miliband, the foreign secretary.

The Pakistani interior ministry said it had evidence Al-Qaeda was behind the killing, naming Baitullah Mehsud, a militant tribal leader from southern Waziristan, as the mastermind. Mehsud angrily denied the claim.

Pakistan’s interior ministry ruled out using western investigators yesterday but told Bhutto’s family that they could exhume her body if they wanted to carry out an autopsy.



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