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Benazir Bhutto

Benazir Bhutto (born 1953) became the first woman head of government in the Muslim world when she was elected prime minister of Pakistan in 1988, only to be deposed in a coup 20 months later. She was re-elected in 1993 but was dismissed three years later amid various corruption scandals. Some of these scandals involve contracts awarded to Swiss companies during her regime and remain unresolved. Her husband has been implicated, as well.

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The daughter of former Pakistani premier, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, Benazir Bhutto was educated in the west, notably at Harvard University, and Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford. She temporarily left Harvard for New York City in 1971, when India sent troops into East Pakistan -- soon to be called Bangladesh -- and her father, as West Pakistan's foreign minister, traveled to the United Nations to resolve the issue. Benazir Bhutto joined her father in New York City and acted as a kind of assistant to him. This seems to have been a formative experience for her, in that watching her father in action brought her out of the academy and showed her the ways of power politics. Her remaining years in the United States included active participation in various social causes.

During her time at Oxford, she was president of the Oxford Union, after the election had to be re-run because she accused her rival of illegal canvassing. Her entire undergraduate career was fuelled by controversy, coming in the middle of a period when her father's administration was being challenged both at home and abroad.

After graduating, she returned to Pakistan, but, in the course of her father's imprisonment and execution, she was placed under house arrest. Having been allowed, in 1984, to go back to the UK, she was leader in exile of her father's party, but was unable to make her political presence felt in Pakistan until the death of General Zia ul-Haq.

Then in the first open election in more than a decade, voters in Pakistan chose populist candidate Benazir Bhutto on November 16, 1988 to be Prime Minister. Bhutto was sworn-in on that December 2 becoming the first woman to head the government of an Islam-dominated state

Bhutto has lived in self-imposed exile since 1999 when she left Pakistan to avoid arrest in a corruption case. While she still heads the Pakistan People's Party and says she wants to return to office, a vast majority of people in Pakistan are convinced that both her husband and her were extremely corrupt. It therefore is not surprising to note that her husband, Asif Ali Zardari, is serving a seven-year prison term in Pakistan on charges of taking kickbacks. It is believed they stole hundreds of millions of dollars through demanding 'commissions' on all types of government contracts and other dealings.

It was during Bhutto's rule that the repressive Taliban gained prominence in Afghanistan with the financial assistance of her government. The Taliban took power in Kabul in September 1996, and Pakistan was a key supporter of the regime until the September 11 attacks in the United States.

In 2002 Pakistan's current military president, Pervez Musharaf introduced a new amendment to Pakistan's constitution, banning Prime Ministers from serving more than two terms. This disqualifies Bhutto from ever holding the office again, and some said it was largely implemented due to the President's own fear of maintaining his power once democracy returned to the country.

Bhutto currently lives in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, where she cares for her children and mother, who is suffering from Alzheimer's disease.

Referenced By

16 November | 16th November | 1988 | 2 December | 2nd December | Abdul Basit Karim | Abdul Khan | Abdul Qadeer Khan | Adam Adel Ali | Adam Khan Baluch | Adam Sali | Adam Salih | Adel Sabah | Afghanistan timeline February 15-28, 2003 | Afghanistan timeline February 2003 | Ali Bhutto | Baby Boomer | Baby Boomers | Committee for a Marxist International | December 2 | December 2nd | Famous women in history | Farooq Leghari | Foreign relations of India | Ghulam Ishaq Khan | Harvard | Harvard College | Harvard University | History of Pakistan | ISO 3166-1:PK | India/Transnational issues | Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford | List of Muslims | List of Pakistanis | List of Political Families | List of Prime Ministers of Pakistan | List of assassins | List of famous Muslims | List of notable Oxford students | List of noted Muslims | List of people by name: BH | List of people by name: Bf | List of people by name: Bf-Bh | List of people by name: Bg | Listing of noted Muslims | Mohammad Zia ul-Haq | Muhammad Zia ul-Haq | Naji Awaita Haddad | Naji Haddad | Najy Awaita Haddad | Najy Haddad | Nonproliferation | November 16 | November 16th | Nuclear Age | Nuclear proliferation | Oxford Union | Oxford Union Society | Pakistan | Pakistan/History | Pakistan People's Party | Pakistan Peoples Party | Pakistani | Paul Vijan | Paul Vijay | Political families | Political families of the world | Political family | Prime Minister of Pakistan | Prominent figures in Islam | Ramsey Youssef | Ramsi Yousef | Ramsi Youssef | Ramzi Ahmad Yousef | Ramzi Ahmed Yousef | Ramzi Ahmed Youssef | Ramzi Mohammad Yousef | Ramzi Mohammed Yousef | Ramzi Usef | Ramzi Usif | Ramzi Yosef | Ramzi Yousef | Ramzi Yousif | Ramzi Youssef | Ramzi Yusaf | Ramzi Yusef | Ramzi Yusif | Ramzi Yussuf | Youssef Ramsy | Zia-ul-Haq | Zia ul-Haq | Zulfikar Ali Bhutto | Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto

 

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Benazir Bhutto
ar_javeria@hotmail.com - February 16th, 2005
i need to send this message to benazir bhutto Dearest Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto, I, Javeria Shaikh, student of final year (fifth year) Architecture at Indus Valley School of art and Architecture (near Bilawal House), am a big fan of yours, since I am a Sindhi and I belonging to Shikarpur (mother side), and Rodhi (father Side), and am a supporter of Mr. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto hence PPP (Pakistan. Peoples. Party); and I have a huge respect and care for you. Being a responsible citizen of Pakistan, I am not going to use my Architectural knowledge into making pretty building for
read more »       messages 1
 
Benazir Bhutto
kohatian114@yahoo.com - February 19th, 2005
Dear webmaster, i am student of ist year in www.kohatian.co cadet college kohat. please i need Email address of Benzair bhutto OR Home address now adays. Hope to hear soon. Regards,
read more »       messages 1
 

 

 

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Benazir Bhutto".

 

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