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Benazir
Bhutto
Benazir Bhutto was born in Karachi, Pakistan
to a prominent political family. At age 16 she left her homeland to
study at Harvard's Radcliffe College. After completing her undergraduate
degree at Radcliffe she studied at England's Oxford University, where
she was awarded a second degree in 1977.
Later that year she returned to Pakistan where her father, Zulfikar
Ali Bhutto, had been elected prime minister, but days after her arrival,
the military seized power and her father was imprisoned. In 1979 he was
hanged by the military government of General Zia Ul Haq.
Bhutto herself was also arrested many times over
the following years, and was detained for three years before being
permitted to leave the country in 1984. She settled in London, but along
with her two brothers, she founded an underground organization to resist
the military dictatorship. When her brother died in 1985, she returned
to Pakistan for his burial, and was again arrested for participating in
anti-government rallies.
She returned to London after her release, and
martial law was lifted in Pakistan at the end of the year. Anti-Zia
demonstrations resumed and Benazir Bhutto returned to Pakistan in April
1986. The public response to her return was tumultuous, and she publicly
called for the resignation of Zia Ul Haq, whose government had executed
her father.
She was elected co-chairwoman of the Pakistan
People's Party (PPP) along with her mother, and when free elections were
finally held in 1988, she herself became Prime Minister. At 35, she was
one of the youngest chief executives in the world, and the first woman
to serve as prime minister in an Islamic country.
Only two years into her first term, President Ghulam Ishaq Khan
dismissed Bhutto from office. She initiated an anti-corruption campaign,
and in 1993 was re-elected as Prime Minister. While in office, she
brought electricity to the countryside and built schools all over the
country. She made hunger, housing and health care her top priorities,
and looked forward to continuing to modernize Pakistan.
At the same time, Bhutto faced constant opposition
from the Islamic fundamentalist movement. Her brother Mir Murtaza, who
had been estranged from Benazir since their father's death, returned
from abroad and leveled charges of corruption at Benazir's husband, Asif
Ali Zardari. Mir Murtaza died when his bodyguard became involved in a
gunfight with police in Karachi. The Pakistani public was shocked by
this turn of events and PPP supporters were divided over the charges
against Zardari.
In 1996 President Leghari of Pakistan dismissed
Benazir Bhutto from office, alleging mismanagement, and dissolved the
National Assembly. A Bhutto re-election bid failed in 1997, and the next
elected government, headed by the more conservative Nawaz Sharif, was
overthrown by the military. Bhutto's husband was imprisoned, and once
again, she was forced to leave her homeland. For nine years, she and her
children lived in exile in London, where she continued to advocate the
restoration of democracy in Pakistan. In the autumn of 2007, in the face
of death threats from radical Islamists, and the hostility of the
government, she returned to her native country.
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Although she was greeted by enthusiastic crowds, within hours of her
arrival, her motorcade was attacked by a suicide bomber. She survived
this first assassination attempt, although more than 100 bystanders died
in the attack. With national elections scheduled for January 2008, her
Pakistan People's Party was poised for a victory that would make Bhutto
prime minister once again. Only a few weeks before the election, the
extremists struck again. After a campaign rally in Rawalpindi, a gunman
fired at her car before detonating a bomb, killing himself and more than
20 bystanders. Bhutto was rushed to the hospital, but soon succumbed to
injuries suffered in the attack. In the wake of her death, rioting
erupted throughout the country. The loss of the country's most popular
democratic leader has plunged Pakistan into turmoil, intensifying the
dangerous instability of a nuclear-armed nation in a highly volatile
region.
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