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Teenager cast as new hero in epic Bhutto tragedy

31 décembre 2007, 20:00

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The 19-year-old son of slain Pakistan opposition leader Benazir Bhutto is now heir to the country?s most powerful political dynasty.

University student Bilawal Zardari, Bhutto?s only son and eldest child, stepped forward to receive the family?s inheritance on Sunday, accepting joint leadership of her party along with his father, Asif Ali Zardari.

Here are some facts about Bilawal Zardari:

● Bilawal is six years short of the eligible age to stand for parliament and is more familiar with the high streets of Dubai and London, his family homes during Benazir Bhutto?s long years of exile, than with Pakistan?s troubled electorates.

● He went to a prestigious high school in Dubai and recently followed his mother?s footsteps tos Oxford, but his mother?s constant political travails and his father?s jailing for eight years on ?cooked up? graft charges left a deep imprint on him.

● In the violent tradition of South Asia?s major political dynasties, where leadership can end in a pool of blood, Bilawal finds himself called to centre stage of an epic tragedy.

● Almost 30 years before his mother was assassinated in a gun-and-bomb attack, his grandfather, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, Pakistan?s first popularly elected prime minister, was hanged by the military regime that had deposed him.

● In his few press interviews, an adolescent Bilawal revealed a political conscience and a burning sense of injustice at the way his mother and father had been treated by Pakistan?s military and by her chief political rival, Nawaz Sharif.

● As a 16-year-old at high school, he told the Press Trust of India in an interview in 2004 that he felt justice and democracy held the key to resolving Pakistan?s problems.

● Asked if he would one day enter the whirlpool of Pakistani politics, Bilawal, a Taekwondo black-belt and horse-riding enthusiast like his father, was quoted as saying: ?We will see, I don?t know. I would like to help the people of Pakistan, so I will decide when I finish my studies.? He added: ?I can either enter politics, or I can enter another career that would benefit the people.?

DOCTOR RELIVES FATHER?S FATE AFTER BHUTTO ATTACK

A grim twist of fate saw Pakistani doctor Mussadiq Khan struggling to save the life of a Pakistani leader struck down by an assassin, just as Khan?s father had done 56 years ago.

Khan battled in vain to save the life of opposition leader Benazir Bhutto when she was brought to his hospital in Rawlapindi on Thursday following a gun and bomb attack as she left an election rally at a city park. Khan?s doctor father, Sadiq Khan, was on duty at his Rawalpindi hospital in October 1951 when Pakistan?s first prime minister, Liaquat Ali Khan, was brought in after he was gunned down at a rally in the same park where Bhutto was attacked.

Liaquat Ali Khan was also killed and the park was later named Liaquat Bagh after him. Bagh means garden in Urdu.

?It?s God?s will,? Khan told Reuters when asked about the coincidence of father and son attending to two Pakistani leaders attacked in the same place.

Khan said Bhutto was almost dead when she was brought in. ?She was not breathing. She had no blood pressure, no heartbeat. We did a full resuscitation. We worked hard but unfortunately we could not revive her.? ?I did my best but I didn?t succeed. What can I say? ... She was a great leader. She was our leader.? In another grim echo from Pakistan?s turbulent history, Bhutto was killed about two kilometres (one mile) away from the spot where her father, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto (photo), was hanged in 1979.

Her father, Pakistan?s first popularly elected leader, was executed by a military dictator two years after he was overthrown in a coup. The jail where he was hanged was torn down when Benazir became Prime Minister, and turned into a park.

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