Bhutto admits defeat on Kashmir policy
Former Pakistan prime minister Benazir
Bhutto has admitted that her ''hawkish policy on India'' has been
rejected by the people in the recent elections and they have
''endorsed'' Nawaz Sharif's stance to open negotiations with
India.
In her first interview after her Pakistan People's Party's
defeat at the hustings, Bhutto told ANI Television in an
interview that Sharif had ''made no secret of his desire to
improve relations with India.''
Bhutto, in her candid interview to be telecast on Sunday, said,
''We had a more hawkish policy on India but he (Nawaz Sharif) is
the one who has come up with a three-fourth majority. So obviously
people have endorsed his stand to open negotiations with India and
they have rejected our stand that unless India moves on the Kashmir
dispute, there should be no talks.''
Bhutto said the successive prime ministers in Pakistan had
been ''bullied'' by the president, the army, and the intelligence
agencies, rendering them totally helpless.
While expressing her anger at the massive ''bungling'' in the
''unfair'' elections, she was ''happy that another person has
become the prime minister who has the chance to define the powers
of the country's chief executive and to make parliament the real
political core or heart of the system.''
Berating the injustice done to her party, Bhutto said since
1977, four prime minister from Sindh have been dismissed and never
restored.
She said there was one law for premiers from Lahore (Punjab) and
another for those from Larkana (Sindh). ''If it is a Lahore prime
minister, the president needs to be satisfied (before dismissal), but mere newspaper clipping were sufficient for removing a Larkana
prime minister,'' Bhutto said.
The former prime minister said, ''Leghari has become redundant.''
On February 1, she said she had phoned one of Leghari's
friends asking him to tell the president that while trying to oust
her ''you (Leghari) are also losing.''
''This friend of yours (Leghari's) has lost. This other friend
of yours has also lost, and this (yet another) friend of yours has
also lost,'' Bhutto said with glee.
She said she was ''very happy that there is no hung
parliament'' otherwise the president would have returned to his old
tricks and given parliamentary system a bad name. ''Thank God it
has not happened.''
UNI
|