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سائينم
سدائين ڪرين مٿي سنڌ
سڪار
دوست
مٺا دلدار عالم سڀ آباد
ڪرين |
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Profile |
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Zulifqar Ali
Bhutto............... Life Profile |
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Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto ) was a Pakistani
politician who served as the President of Pakistan from 1971
to 1973 and as Prime Minister from 1973 to 1977. He was the
founder of the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), the largest and
most influential political parties of Pakistan. His daughter
Benazir Bhutto also served twice as prime minister; she was
assassinated on December 27, 2007.
Educated at the University of California at Berkeley in the
United States and University of Oxford in the United
Kingdom, Bhutto was noted for his mercurial brilliance and
wit. He was executed in 1979 for authorizing the murder of a
political opponent. The move was done under the directives
of General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq. His supporters add the
honorific title Shaheed, the Sindhi word for "martyr",
before his name, thus: Shaheed-e-Azam Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto
("The Great Martyr"). |
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Early life |
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Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto was born to Khursheed Begum née Lakhi
Bai and Sir
Shah Nawaz Bhutto of a prominent
Muslim family. Zulfiqar was born in his parent's residence near
Larkana,
Sindh. He was their third child—their first one,
Sikandar, died from
pneumonia at age seven in 1914 and the second child,
Imdad Ali, died of
cirrhosis at the age of 39 in 1953.
His father was a wealthy landlord, a
zamindar, and a prominent politician in Sindh, who
enjoyed an influential relationship with the officials of
the
British Raj. As a young boy, Bhutto moved to Worli
Seaface in
Mumbai (then Bombay) to study at the
Cathedral and John Connon School. During this period, he
also became a student activist in the League's
Pakistan Movement. Upon completing high school, Bhutto
attended Premier College Nazamabad. In 1943, his marriage
was arranged with Shireen Amir Begum (died January 19, 2003
in Karachi). In 1947, Bhutto was admitted to the
University of Southern California.
During this time,
Bhutto's father, Sir Shahnawaz, played a controversial role
in the affairs of the state of
Junagadh (now in
Gujarat). Coming to power in a palace coup as the
dewan, he secured the accession of the state to
Pakistan, which was ultimately negated by Indian
intervention in December, 1947.
In 1949, Bhutto transferred to the
University of California, Berkeley, where he earned an
honours degree in
political science. Here he would become interested in
the theories of
socialism, delivering a series of lectures on the
feasibility of socialism in Islamic countries. In June, 1950
Bhutto traveled to
England to study law at
Christ Church,
Oxford. Upon finishing his studies, he was called to the
bar at
Lincoln's Inn in 1953.
Bhutto married his second wife, the Iranian-Kurdish
Begum Nusrat Ispahani
Shi'a Muslim , in
Karachi on
September 8,
1951. Their first child, his daughter
Benazir, was born in 1953. She was followed by
Murtaza in 1954, a second daughter,
Sanam, in 1957, and the youngest child,
Shahnawaz Bhutto, in 1958. He accepted the post of
lecturer at the
Sindh Muslim College, from where he was also awarded an
honorary law degree by the then college President,
Mr. Hassan Ali A. Rahman before establishing himself in
a legal practice in Karachi. He also took over the
management of his family's estate and business interests
after his father's death. |
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Political career |
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In 1957, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto became the youngest member of
Pakistan's delegation to the
United Nations. He would address the
United Nations Sixth Committee on Aggression on
October 25,
1957 and lead Pakistan's deputation to the
United Nations Conference on the Law of the Seas in
1958. In the same year, Bhutto became the youngest Pakistani
cabinet minister when he was given charge of the energy
ministry by President Muhammad
Ayub Khan, who had seized power and declared
martial law. He was subsequently promoted to head the
ministries of commerce, information and industries. Bhutto
became a close and trusted advisor to Ayub, rising in
influence and power despite his youth and relative
inexperience in politics. Bhutto aided Ayub in negotiating
the
Indus Water Treaty with India in 1960. In 1961, Bhutto
negotiated an oil exploration agreement with the
Soviet Union, which also agreed to provide economic and
technical aid to Pakistan. |
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Foreign Minister |
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In 1962, he was appointed Pakistan's foreign minister. His
swift rise to power also brought him national prominence and
popularity.
As foreign minister, Bhutto significantly
transformed Pakistan's hitherto pro-Western foreign policy.
While maintaining a prominent role for Pakistan within the
Southeast Asia Treaty Organization and the
Central Treaty Organization, Bhutto began asserting a
foreign policy course for Pakistan that was independent of
U.S. influence. Bhutto criticized the U.S. for providing
military aid to India during and after the
Sino-Indian War of 1962, which was seen as an abrogation
of Pakistan's alliance with the U.S. Bhutto worked to
establish stronger relations with the
People's Republic of China.
Bhutto visited
Beijing and helped Ayub negotiate trade and military
agreements with the Chinese regime, which agreed to help
Pakistan in a large number of military and industrial
projects. Bhutto also signed the Sino-Pakistan Boundary
Agreement on
March 2,
1963 that transferred 750 square kilometers of territory
from
Pakistan-administered Kashmir to Chinese control. Bhutto
asserted his belief in
non-alignment, making Pakistan an influential member in
non-aligned organizations. Believing in
pan-Islamic unity, Bhutto developed closer relations
with nations such as
Indonesia,
Saudi Arabia and other Arab states.
Bhutto advocated hard-line and confrontational policies
against India over the
Kashmir conflict and other issues. A brief skirmish took
place in August 1965 between Indian and Pakistani forces
near the international boundary in the
Rann of Kutch which was resolved by the U.N. Pakistan
hoped to support an uprising by Kashmiris against India.
Bhutto joined Ayub in
Tashkent to negotiate a peace treaty with the
Indian Prime Minister
Lal Bahadur Shastri. Ayub and Shastri agreed to exchange
prisoners of war and withdraw respective forces to pre-war
boundaries. This agreement was deeply unpopular in Pakistan,
causing major political unrest against Ayub's regime.
Bhutto's criticism of the final agreement caused a major
rift between him and Ayub Khan. Initially denying the
rumors, Bhutto resigned in June, 1967 and expressed strong
opposition to Ayub's regime. |
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Pakistan Peoples Party |
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Following his resignation, large crowds gathered to listen
to Bhutto's speech upon his arrival in Lahore on
June 21,
1967. Tapping a wave of anger and opposition against
Ayub, Bhutto began traveling across the country to deliver
political speeches. In a speech in October, 1966 Bhutto
proclaimed "Islam
is our faith,
democracy is our policy,
socialism is our economy. All power to the people. On
November 30,
1967 Bhutto founded the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) in
Lahore, establishing a strong base of political support in
Punjab, Sindh and amongst the Muhajir communities. Bhutto's
party became a part of the pro-democracy movement involving
diverse political parties from all across Pakistan. PPP
activists staged large protests and strikes in different
parts of the country, increasing pressure on Ayub to resign.
Bhutto's arrest on
November 12,
1968 sparked greater political unrest. After his
release, Bhutto attended the Round Table Conference called
by Ayub in
Rawalpindi, but refused to accept Ayub's continuation in
office and the
East Pakistani politician
Sheikh Mujibur Rahman's
Six point movement for regional autonomy.
Following
Ayub's resignation, the new president Gen.
Yahya Khan promised to hold parliamentary elections on
December 7,
1970. Bhutto's party won a large number of seats from
constituencies in West Pakistan.
However, Sheikh Mujib's
Awami League won an outright majority from the
constituencies located in East Pakistan. Bhutto refused to
accept an Awami League government and famously promised to
"break the legs" of any elected PPP member who dared to
attend the inaugural session of the
National Assembly of Pakistan. Capitalizing on West
Pakistani fears of East Pakistani separatism, Bhutto
demanded that Sheikh Mujib form a coalition with the PPP.
Under substantial pressure from Bhutto and other West
Pakistani political parties, Yahya postponed the inaugural
session of the National Assembly after talks with Sheikh
Mujib failed.
Amidst popular outrage in East Pakistan, Major
Ziaur Rahman, at the direction of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman
declared the independence of "Bangladesh"
on
March 26,
1971 after Mujibur was arrested by the Pakistani Army,
which had been ordered by Yahya to suppress political
activities. Under
Operation Searchlight, Pakistani forces started a
genocide, killed as many as 3 million civilians, Muslims and
religious minorities and
Bengali intellectuals, university professors and
students, raped 0.4 million women in the cantonment. While supportive of the army's genocide and
working to rally international support, Bhutto distanced
himself from the Yahya regime. He refused to accept Yahya's
scheme to appoint Bengali politician
Nurul Amin as prime minister, with Bhutto as deputy
prime minister.
Indian intervention in East Pakistan led to the defeat
of Pakistani forces, who surrendered on
December 16,
1971. Bhutto and others condemned Yahya for failing to
protect Pakistan's unity. Isolated, Yahya resigned on
December 20 and transferred power to Bhutto, who became
the president, army commander-in-chief as well as the first
civilian chief martial law administrator
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Leader of Pakistan |
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As president, Bhutto addressed the nation via radio and
television, saying "My dear countrymen, my dear friends, my
dear students, labourers, peasants… those who fought for
Pakistan… We are facing the worst crisis in our country's
life, a deadly crisis. We have to pick up the pieces, very
small pieces, but we will make a new Pakistan, a prosperous
and progressive Pakistan." He placed Yahya under house
arrest, brokered a ceasefire and ordered the release of
Sheikh Mujib, who was held prisoner by the army. To
implement this, Bhutto reversed the verdict of Mujib's court
trial that had taken place earlier, in which the presiding
Brigadier
Rahimuddin Khan (later General) had sentenced Mujib to
death. Appointing a new cabinet, Bhutto appointed Gen.
Gul Hasan as
Chief of Army Staff. On
January 2,
1972 Bhutto announced the nationalization of all major
industries, including iron and steel, heavy engineering,
heavy electrical, petrochemicals, cement and public
utilities.
A new labour policy was announced increasing workers rights
and the power of trade unions. Although he came from a
feudal background himself, Bhutto announced reforms limiting
land ownership and a government take-over of over a million
acres (4,000 km²) to distribute to landless peasants. More
than 2,000 civil servants were dismissed on charges of
corruption.
Bhutto also dismissed the military chiefs on
March 3 after they refused orders to suppress a major
police strike in Punjab. He appointed Gen.
Tikka Khan as the new Chief of the Army Staff in March
1972 as he felt the General would not interfere in political
matters and would concentrate on rehabilitating the Pakistan
Army. Bhutto convened the National Assembly on
April 14, rescinded martial law on
April 21 and charged the legislators with writing a new
constitution.
Bhutto visited India to meet Prime Minister
Indira Gandhi and negotiated a formal peace agreement
and the release of 93,000 Pakistani
prisoners of war. The two leaders signed the
Shimla Agreement, which committed both nations to
establish a
Line of Control in Kashmir and obligated them to resolve
disputes peacefully through bilateral talks.
Bhutto also promised to hold a future summit for the
peaceful resolution of the Kashmir dispute and pledged to
recognise
Bangladesh.
Although he secured the release of Pakistani soldiers held
by India, Bhutto was criticised by many in Pakistan for
allegedly making too many concessions to India. It is
theorised that Bhutto feared his downfall if he could not
secure the release of Pakistani soldiers, the return of
territory occupied by Indian forces.
Bhutto established an atomic power development programme and
inaugurated the first Pakistani
atomic reactor, built in collaboration with
Canada in
Karachi on
November 28. In January 1973, Bhutto ordered the army to
suppress a rising insurgency in the province of
Balochistan and dismissed the governments in Balochistan
and the
Northwest Frontier Province.
On
March 30, 59 military officers were arrested by army
troops for allegedly plotting a coup against Bhutto, who
appointed then-Brigadier
Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq to head a military tribunal to
investigate and try the suspects. The National Assembly
approved the new constitution, which Bhutto signed into
effect on
April 12. The constitution proclaimed an "Islamic
Republic" in Pakistan with a parliamentary form of
government.
On
August 10, Bhutto turned over the post of president to
Fazal Ilahi Chaudhry, assuming the office of prime
minister instead.
Bhutto officially recognised
Bangladesh in July. Making an official visit to
Bangladesh, Bhutto was criticized in Pakistan for laying
flowers at a memorial for Bangladeshi "freedom
fighters." Bhutto continued to develop closer relations
with China as well as Saudi Arabia and other Muslim nations.
Bhutto hosted the Second Islamic Summit of Muslim nations in
Lahore between
February 22 and
February 24 in 1974.
However, Bhutto faced considerable pressure from Islamic
religious leaders to declare the
Ahmadiya communities as non-Muslims. Failing to restrain
sectarian violence and rioting, Bhutto and the National
Assembly amended the constitution to that effect. Bhutto
intensified his nationalization programme, extending
government control over agricultural processing and consumer
industries. Bhutto also, with advice from
Admiral S.M. Ahsan, inaugurated
Port Qasim, designed to expand harbour facilities near
Karachi. However, the performance of the Pakistani economy
declined amidst increasing bureaucracy and a decline in
private sector confidence. In a surprise move in 1976,
Bhutto appointed
Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq to replace Gen. Tikka Khan,
surpassing five generals senior to Zia.. |
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Nuclear program |
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Bhutto was the founder of
Pakistan's nuclear program. Its militarization was
initiated in January 1972 and, in its initial years, was
implemented by General Tikka Khan. The Karachi
Nuclear Power Plant was inaugurated by Bhutto during his
role as President of Pakistan at the end of 1972. Long
before, as Minister for Fuel, Power and National Resources,
he has played a key role in setting up of the Pakistan
Atomic Energy Commission. The
Kahuta facility was also established by the Bhutto
Administration.
In his book If I am Assassinated,
written from his prison cell, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto revealed
how Henry Kissinger had said to him in 1976: "we can destabilise your government and make a horrible example out
of you".
Kissinger had warned Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto that if Pakistan
continued with its nuclear program the Prime Minister would
have to pay a heavy price, a statement many take to indicate
an American hand in Mr. Bhutto's trial and execution |
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Popular unrest and military coup |
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Bhutto began facing considerable criticism and increasing
unpopularity as his term progressed.
Initially targeting leader of the opposition
Abdul Wali Khan and his opposition
National Awami Party (NAP). Despite the ideological
similarity of the two parties the clash of egos both inside
and outside the National Assembly became increasingly fierce
and started with the Federal governments decision to oust
the NAP provincial government in Balochistan for alleged
secessionist activities
and culminating in the banning of the party and arrest of
much of its leadership after the death of
Hayat Khan Sherpao, a close lieutenant of Bhutto, in a
bomb blast in the frontier town of Peshawar.
Dissidence
also increased within the PPP and the murder of dissident
leader Ahmed Raza Kasuri's father led to public outrage and
intra-party hostility as Bhutto was accused of masterminding
the crime. Powerful PPP leaders such as
Ghulam Mustafa Khar openly condemned Bhutto and called
for protests against his regime. The political crisis in the
NWFP and Balochistan intensified as civil liberties remained
suspended and an estimated 100,000 troops deployed there
were accused of human rights abuses and killing large
numbers of civilians.
On
January 8,
1977 many opposition political parties grouped to form
the
Pakistan National Alliance (PNA).
Bhutto called fresh elections and the PNA participated in
those elections with full force and managed to contest the
elections jointly even though they had grave differences in
their opinions and views. The PNA faced defeat but did not
accept the results, accusing their opponents of rigging the
election. They first claimed rigging on 14 seats and finally
on 40 seats in the national assembly and boycotted
provisional elections turn out in national elections was of
highest degree. Provincial elections were held amidst low
voter turnout and an opposition boycott, violent PNA declare
the newly-elected Bhutto government as illegitimate. Muslim
leaders such as
Maulana Maududi called for the overthrow of Bhutto's
regime.
Intensifying political and civil disorder prompted Bhutto to
hold talks with PNA leaders, which culminated in an
agreement for the dissolution of the assemblies and fresh
elections under a form of government of national unity.
However on July 5,
1977 Bhutto and members of his cabinet were arrested by
troops under the order of General Zia.
General Zia announced that martial law had been imposed,
the constitution suspended and all assemblies dissolved. Zia
also ordered the arrest of senior PPP and PNA leaders but
promised elections in October. Bhutto was released on
July 29 and was received by a large crowd of supporters
in his hometown of Larkana. He immediately began touring
across Pakistan, delivering speeches to large crowds and
planning his political comeback. Bhutto was arrested again
on
September 3 before being released on bail on
September 13. Fearing yet another arrest, Bhutto named
his wife,
Nusrat Bhutto, president of the Pakistan People's Party. Bhutto
was imprisoned on
September 17 and a large number of PPP leaders and
activists arrested and disqualified from contesting in
elections. |
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Trial of the Prime Minister |
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Bhutto's trial began on
October 24 on charges of "conspiracy to murder"
Ahmed Raza Kasuri.
On July 5,1977 the military, led by General
Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq, staged a coup. Zia relieved
prime minister Bhutto of power, holding him in detention
for a month. Zia pledged that new elections would be held in
90 days. He kept postponing the
elections and publicly retorted during successive press
conferences that if the elections were held in the presence
of Bhutto his party would not return to power again.
Upon his release, Bhutto traveled the country amid adulatory
crowds of PPP supporters. He used to take the train
traveling from the south to the north and on the way, would
address public meetings at different stations. Several of
these trains were late, some by days, in reaching their
respective destinations and as a result Bhutto was banned
from traveling by train. The last visit he made to the city
of
Multan in the province of Punjab was marked the turning
point in Bhutto's political career and ultimately, his life.
In spite of the administration's efforts to block the
gathering, the crowd was so large that it became disorderly,
providing an opportunity for the administration to declare
that Bhutto had been taken into custody because the people
were against him and it had become necessary to protect him
from the masses for his own safety. |
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Re-arrest and fabrication of
evidence |
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On September 3 the Army arrested Bhutto again on charges of
authorizing the murder of a political opponent in March
1974. A 35-year-old politician
Ahmed Raza Kasuri tried to run as a PPP candidate in
elections, despite having previously left the party. The
Pakistan Peoples Party rebuffed him. Three years
earlier, Kasuri and his family had been ambushed, leaving
Kasuri's father,
Nawab Mohammad Ahmad Khan, dead. Kasuri claimed that he
was the actual target, accusing Bhutto of being the
mastermind. Kasuri later claimed that he had been the victim
of 15 assassination attempts.
Bhutto was released 10 days
after his arrest after a judge, Justice
KMA Samadani found the evidence "contradictory and
incomplete." Justice Samadani had to pay for this; he was
immediately removed from the court and placed at the
disposal of law ministry. Three days later Zia arrested
Bhutto again on the same charges, this time under "martial
law." When the PPP organized demonstrations among Bhutto's
supporters, Zia canceled the upcoming elections.
Bhutto was arraigned before the
High Court of
Lahore instead of in a lower court, thus automatically
depriving him of one level of appeal. The judge who had
granted him bail was removed. Five new judges were
appointed, headed by
Chief Justice of Lahore High Court
Maulvi Mushtaq Ali, who denied bail. The trial would
last five months, and
Bhutto appeared in court on a dock specially built for
the trial.
Proceedings began on October 24,1977. Masood Mahmood, the
director general of the Federal Security Force (since
renamed the
Federal Investigation Agency), testified against Bhutto.
Mahmood had been arrested immediately after Zia's coup and
had been imprisoned for two months prior to taking the
stand. In his testimony, he claimed Bhutto had ordered
Kasuri's assassination and that four members of the Federal
Security Force had organized the ambush on Bhutto's orders.
The 4 alleged assassins were arrested and later
confessed. They were brought into court as "co-accused" but
one of them recanted his testimony, declaring that it had
been extracted from him under torture. The following day,
the witness was not present in court; the prosecution
claimed that he had suddenly "fallen ill."
Bhutto's defense challenged the prosecution with proof
from an army logbook the prosecution had submitted. It
showed that the jeep allegedly driven during the attack on
Kasuri was not even in Lahore at the time. The prosecution
had the logbook disregarded as "incorrect." During the
defense's cross-examination of witnesses, the bench often
interrupted questioning. The 706-page official transcript
contained none of the objections or inconsistencies in the
evidence pointed out by the defense. Former
U.S. Attorney General
Ramsey Clark, who attended the trial, wrote:
"The prosecution's case was based entirely on several
witnesses who were detained until they confessed, who
changed and expanded their confessions and testimony with
each reiteration, who contradicted themselves and each
other, who, except for Masood Mahmood... were relating what
others said, whose testimony led to four different theories
of what happened, absolutely uncorroborated by an
eyewitness, direct evidence, or physical evidence."
When Bhutto began his testimony on January 25, 1978,
Chief Justice Maulvi Mustaq closed the courtroom to all
observers. Bhutto responded by refusing to say any more.
Bhutto demanded a retrial, accusing the Chief Justice of
bias, after Mustaq allegedly insulted Bhutto's home
province. The court refused his demand. |
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Death sentence and appeal |
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On March 18, 1978, Bhutto was found guilty of murder and
sentenced to death. Bhutto did not seek an appeal. While he
was transferred to a cell in
Rawalpindi central jail, his family appealed on his
behalf, and a hearing before the Supreme Court commenced in
May. Bhutto was given one week to prepare. Bhutto issued a
thorough rejoinder to the charges, although Zia blocked its
publication. Chief Justice
S. Anwarul Haq adjourned the court until the end of July
1978, supposedly because five of the nine appeals court
judges were willing to overrule the Lahore verdict. One of
the pro-Bhutto judges was due to retire in July.
Chief
Justice S. Anwarul Haq presided over the trial, despite
being close to Zia, even serving as Acting President when
Zia was out of the country. Bhutto's lawyers managed to
secure Bhutto the right to conduct his own defense before
the Supreme Court. On December 18, 1978, Bhutto made his
appearance in public before a packed courtroom in Rawalpindi.
By this time he had been on death row for 9 months and had
gone without fresh water for the previous 25 days. He
addressed the court for four days, speaking without notes.
The appeal was completed on December 23,1978. On February
6, 1979, the Supreme Court issued its verdict, "Guilty",
a decision reached by a bare 4-to-3 majority. The Bhutto
family had seven days in which to appeal. The court granted
a stay of execution while it studied the petition. By
February 24, 1979 when the next court hearing began, appeals
for clemency arrived from many heads of state. Zia said that
the appeals amounted to "trade union activity" among
politicians.
On March 24, 1979 the Supreme Court dismissed the appeal.
Zia upheld the death sentence. Shaheed Zulifqar Ali Bhutto was hanged at Adiyala
Jail,Rawalpindi.On 4 April 1979 at 2.04am PST
for the sack of pakistan nation
and their prosperity by the Pakistan Establishment |
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Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto
S/o
Sir Shah nawaz Bhutto

Born
January 5, 1928
Martyrdom
April 4, 1979
Educated at
University of California at Berkeley,
United States
University of Oxford United Kingdom
Profession
Lecturer (First Job)
Advocate
Politician
Founder of
Pakistan People's Party
(Founded on
November 30,
1967)
Marriages
First marriage with
Shireen Amir Begum
on 1943
Second marriage with
Nusrat Ispahani
on
September 8,
1951
Political Carrier
Start from 1957 with the
youngest member of Pakistan delegation to
United Nations
In 1958 He become the
youngest Pakistani cabinet
minister of Energy
In 1962 He become
Pakistan' Foreign Minister
President of pakistan
(1971 to 1973)
Prime Minster of Pakistan
(1973 to 1977)
Children
Benazir Bhutto Shaheed
Murtaza Bhutto Shaheed
Shahnawaz Bhutto Shaheed
Sanam Bhutto
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