Jemima Khan: Mad and bad – but the West will turn a blind eye
Dogged by allegations of crime and corruption, Pakistan's new president could lose power to his army if he fails his restive people
Sunday, 7 September 2008
President Asif Ali Zardari, Benazir Bhutto's widower, formerly known as Mr Ten Per Cent because of kickbacks received during his wife's time in office, has become one of the most powerful and potentially dangerous men in the subcontinent. Mad and bad. And now omnipotent. He is head of state, supreme commander of the armed forces, has the power to dismiss parliament, appoint the heads of the army and election commission – and, as chairman of the National Command Authority, has the final say in the deployment of nuclear weapons.
Earlier Zardari vowed to relinquish the executive powers that Pervez Musharraf gave to the originally ceremonial presidency. Now he's evasive. Despite the fact that he has little public support (14 per cent, according to a recent poll), holds no seat in parliament and has no mandate other than his association with the Bhutto name, he had every right to nominate himself or anyone else as President. His party – inherited from his late wife – was democratically elected in February and has the largest number of seats in parliament.
The man who now has his finger on the nuclear button was only last year declared unfit to stand trial in a UK court on account of multiple mental problems. According to court documents filed by his psychiatrists, he suffers from dementia, major depressive disorder and post-traumatic stress after spending 11 of the past 20 years in jail in Pakistan. According to their testimony last year, he found it hard even to recall the names of his wife and children.
He has long had memory problems. In the past he has been unable to recall whether he was the owner of a multimillion-pound Surrey estate (he thought not, but later took possession of it) or if $60m (£34m) in a frozen Swiss bank account was actually his. He also thought that he had graduated from the London School of Economics, or was it the London School of Business Studies? There are no records of his doing either.
The doctors' diagnoses of severe mental ill-health rid Zardari of his corruption case in the UK. Last November's National Reconciliation Ordinance, brokered by the Americans to allow Bhutto's return to Pakistan and passed by Musharraf, rid him of the rest. It also guaranteed him lifelong immunity from prosecution for corruption. He appears to have made medical history and rid himself of his dementia in time to become President. The only thing he can't shake off is his appalling reputation.
Zardari has long been dogged by allegations of crime and corruption. In 2003, a Swiss magistrate found him guilty in absentia of laundering $10m. Musharraf's National Accountability Bureau estimated that he had looted up to $1.5bn from the treasury during his wife's two terms in office. In 1990, he was in trouble for allegedly tying a remote-controlled bomb to the leg of a businessman and sending him into a bank to withdraw money from his account as a pay-off. More sinisterly, he was charged with complicity in the murder of his brother-in-law Murtaza Bhutto, but the case was never tried. He was also implicated in the 1996 murder of a judge, Justice Nizam Ahmed, and his lawyer son.
Even if Zardari is given the benefit of the doubt and has changed after his wife's assassination and his many years in jail, his behaviour in the run-up to his election as President proves he still can't be trusted. He has already reneged on several written agreements made with the coalition, including his pledge to field a non-partisan candidate for president, as well as his pre-election promise to reinstate the judges deposed by Musharraf. If reinstated, they could repeal the amnesty granted to him and reopen corruption investigations.
Inside Pakistan, people are despondent. The economic situation is worse than ever, with inflation at almost 25 per cent. Outside Pakistan, despite his reputation, he is tolerated. He's seen as pro-West. He will be another "key ally in the war on terror".
America is stepping up its military campaign in the region, not least because George Bush wants Osama bin Laden's grizzled head before the US presidential election on 4 November. Strikes against Pakistan's tribal areas by US/Nato forces are not uncommon, but on Wednesday, for the first time, ground forces attacked a village on the Pakistani side of the border, in South Waziristan, killing 20 innocent people. Tribesmen are up in arms – literally – and have promised revenge, and there has been widespread condemnation. If Zardari is seen to be tolerating such attacks by foreign troops inside Pakistan, a violent backlash is likely.
On Friday, he pledged to eliminate the Taliban. A tall order. Since Musharraf joined the "war on terror" at US bidding and expense and sent Pakistani troops into the Federally Administered Tribal Areas, Pashtun tribesmen have been falling over their Kalashnikovs to join the Taliban. With hundreds of thousands of internally displaced people from Bajaur as a result of conflict, weekly reports of aerial attacks and collateral damage, the Taliban movement is growing in strength by the day.
And it's not just the formidable Pashtuns on the warpath. The Taliban is operating on fertile soil. Nationwide, 71 per cent of Pakistanis oppose co-operating with the US in counterterrorism and 51 per cent oppose fighting the Taliban at all, according to a June Gallup poll. The vast majority of Pakistan's 190 million people may not like the Taliban, but they dislike the US and what is seen as its proxy army even more. Even within the army, there are rebels who object to being forced to kill their own people. The majority of the population is also deeply opposed to what it sees as a foreign occupation in Afghanistan, with more than 80 per cent favouring a negotiated settlement and withdrawal.
Suicide attacks within Pakistan – unheard of before 9/11 – are now so commonplace they barely make the front pages. From the wilds of the tribal areas to the mosques of west London, the war on terror has been hopelessly counterproductive, despite being fuelled by millions of dollars. Its chief beneficiaries have been the Taliban and their sympathisers who feed on the instability.
Zardari has replaced Musharraf, but their policies will be the same. He is unlikely to prove more successful at tackling extremism. His already meagre popularity rating is expected to dwindle rapidly as he is increasingly perceived as another US stooge. And despite all his powers, he is still less powerful than the army. As ever, if the politicians fail to steer Pakistan through its myriad problems, the military, which has notched up 33 years of rule in Pakistan's 61-year history, will step in.
What is depressing is not that everything now changes with the election of Asif Ali Zardari, but that everything stays the same.
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Copyright 2008 Independent News and Media Limited

Comments
63 Comments
Well Done! Honestly I had nearly given up thinking that everybody supported this corrupt and evil man. God help Pakistan when there are people like ZARDARI, SAHER, AND SHERBANO AHMED on the planet.
They will only be satisfied when they have personally looted all the wealth of the country (they consider it to be an unspoken obligation). And by the way zardari doesnt even have a degree. We have a jahil fuedal lord sitting in power who speaks of democracy and progress. Shame on all those who support him.
Posted by Sehrish | 13.09.08, 14:59 GMT
zardari is corrupt, everyone knows .. but who isnt? jemima u really dun need to worry too much abt pakistan, we pakistanis selected ppp to get most seats, and it is a parliament's decision to select the president unlike the way musharraf came. when he came it is possible a poll would have shown 80% inclination towards him, the ppl who poll and ppl who vote are two differnt catagories and whoever thinks ppl who poll are more reliable .. well they have no idea what happens in villages where there is no light, no news and they vote, why because they are the ones who see the real person not what is the propoganda and make their decision based on propogandas. uptill now zardari has not made any mistakes when it comes to startegic decions not emotional decisions, and that is what is irritating evryone and thus the compliment of mr. 10 percent.. grow up kids!
Posted by saher | 12.09.08, 16:35 GMT
Well said and in line with the opinion of most educated pakistani people
Posted by Ghazan | 11.09.08, 21:26 GMT
I think you have done a great job by making naked the face of the person who has virtually ripped off the country. Thumbs up for these bold words.
Posted by Wasif | 11.09.08, 08:23 GMT
excellent I appreciate,welldone.
Posted by Anwar mohammad | 10.09.08, 22:17 GMT
sherbano ahmed.......Do you even understand what Jemima has written ??? ( except for *dementia problem*)
Posted by Imran K. | 10.09.08, 12:58 GMT
Jemima your bias is contradicting yourself: by giving elaborate details of what is wrong with zardari and then to say nothing has changed: Atlas sounds like the infasmous "khan confusion"
Finally Jemima: If you think nothing has changed with Zardari in the Presidency? All I can say is: if zardari has a dementia problem! then you dear might have perceptional one.
Posted by sherbano ahmad | 09.09.08, 23:48 GMT
very well written!
Posted by s | 09.09.08, 16:36 GMT
Yes, Jemima should write more - at least the millions of her father haven't pickled her brain as Zardari's stolen loot has.
And by the way, it is well-informed and well-written.
sf
Posted by sf | 09.09.08, 15:52 GMT
Thanks Jemima for eye-opening article. For the west it is business as usual provided that the guy in the state house can 'dine and wine' with them.
What an insult to democracy and Human Rights to bless such rotten lot!
Zardari knows too well; he is corrupt through and through. Even what seems to be as a political clout for him is nothing but the name of his slain wife.
But again this is Pakistan's politics based on clan and technical know who. It is but a systemic corruption blossoming thanks to bad fabrics of the nation.
But one thing is obvious. Pakistanis will soon pay the price soon the true Zardari reveals himself.
The won't be the first to suffer from this anathema. Bakili Muluzi and Fredrick Chiluba in Malawi and Zambia respectively did the same. The fooled west that thought would fool them by using them. In the end, it was shame for these two personalities and the west altogether.
Zardari's climax is just the matter of time.
Posted by Nkwazi Mhango | 09.09.08, 15:39 GMT
63 Comments