I WRITE this one day before Zulfikar Ali Bhutto,  elected  prime minister of this luckless country, was murdered 32 years  ago by an  army usurper and his handmaiden judiciary, and two days  before he, the  beloved leader of millions of Pakistanis, was buried in  the presence of  seven or eight people, the rude charpoy on which his  body lay for the  funeral prayers so short that his feet were protruding  a foot off it. 
His  wife and daughter were not allowed within hundreds of miles of  the  funeral, jailed as they were in the headquarters of the  establishment,  Rawalpindi; not a sparrow flew that day in Larkana. The  military  establishment under Zia had had its revenge: killing the very  man who  put salve on the deep wounds inflicted on the hapless nation,  and upon  the army rank and file, by unthinking and cruel and stupid  generals led  by a drunken sot.
And then some say his murder should not be  revisited, yes that is  the word I want, by our newly emboldened and  muscular (the Almighty be  praised) superior judiciary; trotting out  mealy-mouthed reasons and  technicalities and more mealy-mouthed reasons  and technicalities. There  are very many reasons to look at the  disgraceful way in which ZAB was  tried and then done to death.
The  first, of course, is the shameful way in which his so-called  ‘trial’  was held, first by denying him a court of first appeal by  trying him in  the Lahore High Court instead of in a sessions court.  Secondly, by  bringing him before a judge who was an avowed enemy:  Maulvi Mushtaq,  whose appalling behaviour towards ZAB during the trial  is a horror story  in itself. And thirdly, by the army usurper putting  pressure on pliant  (all of them from Punjab, please note) judges  through the servile chief  justice, Anwarul Haq as admitted by Nasim  Hasan Shah, one of the hanging  judges, and later the chief justice(!)  of Pakistan. I ask you.
Indeed,  by the dictator and his collaborators in the judiciary using  every  trick to get rid of those judges who were considered  ‘unreliable’ (all  non-Punjabis, please note again), and changing the  make-up of the bench  to facilitate their plan to hang Bhutto come what  may, forced retirement  of judges included.
Nor is this all. Noted lawyer Raza Kazim  disclosed just the other  day that Anwarul Haq, who headed the hanging  bench, tricked Bhutto into  stating that (unlike the Lahore High Court)  he had faith in the  Supreme Court which was hearing his appeal. The quid  pro quo was that  the death sentence imposed by the Lahore High Court  would be commuted  to life imprisonment by the Supreme Court. This trick  was played on  Bhutto through Mr Hamid Mehmood a great gentleman, who had  grown up  with Anwarul Haq, and who also knew and liked ZAB.
When  Mr Mehmood visited Bhutto in Rawalpindi jail and made the  proposition to  him, ZAB asked him if he was sure this was not a trap  being set by  Anwarul Haq. Mehmood replied that he had known the chief  justice since  childhood and that he would not go back on his word. We  all know what  happened subsequently. Hamid Mehmood was a broken man  after that and  could never forgive himself for trusting Anwarul Haq. He  died of a  broken heart not long after. No, gentlemen, no, ZAB’s case  must be  revisited and if it opens other Pandora’s boxes so be it. We  simply must  exorcise our devils.
Maulana Fazlur Rehman is an unfathomable  personality if he is  anything: requesting the American ambassador (thank  you, WikiLeaks) to  push his candidacy for the premiership of this  luckless country one  day; the very next saying the Americans are the  worst thing that ever  happened to Pakistan, and the Taliban the very  best; the very next  offering to mediate between the Americans and the  Taliban, but not in  Pakistan (thank you again, WikiLeaks).
Let’s  say it straight: why will their apologists not understand that  the  Taliban and their friends and associates whether they be called Al  Qaeda  or Hizbut Tahrir or Al-Muhajiroun or Afghan Taliban or Pakistani   Taliban, and all other such, are all linked to one another, and are in   the business of taking over the state of Pakistan, a first step to   global jihad? And that they will kill and maim all who come in their   way: innocent men and women and children; our army soldiers; our police,   even their own apologists such as Maulana Fazlur Rehman simply because   he too is a part of the organised state.
Why will the maulana,  deft son of the greatly deft, and shall we say  most innovative,  politician Mufti Mahmood, not understand that he was  targeted twice in  as many days last week precisely because he is a part  of the democratic  system, by the very same terrorists he supports?  Plainly said, anarchy  is the aim of these murderers.
Nor is it only people like the  maulana who refuse to smell the  coffee, so does my friend Imran Khan.  Nor do my friends in the  afwaj-i-Pakistan, hung up as they are on being  India-centric whatever  the devil that means. Really, one despairs at the  shallowness of the  thinking that goes into their ‘strategic’ policies.  Consider: the  so-called and short-lived Kurram peace deal seemingly  done, and now  allowed to be undone to further the self-same agenda,  taking with it  many innocent lives so cruelly cut short by the terrorist  murderers.
The denouement is at hand, however, and no matter what  lies are told  to the common people and more harebrained schemes thought  out, this  country is in for a very high jump indeed. Remember that the  US  presidential elections are to be held in 2012 with campaigning  starting  this autumn. Remember too that the Republicans, more hard-line  than  the democrats, will up the ante re: Afghanistan many notches. Think   about it, gentlemen, and for God’s sake come to your senses.





