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University of Virginia Professor Says Bhutto Assassination Could Lead to Violence in Short Term PDF Print E-mail

Source:  www.assistnews.net

Date:  2007-12-27

By Jeremy Reynalds
Correspondent for ASSIST News Service

CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA (ANS) -- The assassination of Pakistani opposition leader Benazir Bhutto Thursday is liable to lead to violence in the short term, but a leadership void among democratic forces in the country in the longer term.

That's according to John Echeverri-Gent, associate professor of politics at the University of Virginia.

Bhutto was assassinated at a political rally in Rawalpindi near the Pakistani capital of Islamabad. According to various media reports, the former prime minister was shot at close range and was further injured by a suicide bomb blast.

"Rawalpindi is a military center. If Bhutto was going to be secure, she should be most secure in a city like Rawalpindi," Echeverri-Gent said in a news release. "This will reflect very poorly on the government of Gen. [Pervez] Musharaff, who had promised her security and who was responsible for her security."

The circumstances of the assassination, Echeverri-Gent said, are likely to provoke a strong reaction against the government.

"It's not clear what the consequences of this reaction will be," he said in the news release. "There is some possibility that Gen. Musharaff will have a more difficult time staying in office."

Elections are scheduled in Pakistan for Jan. 8. Should they still occur on schedule, Echeverri-Gent said it is possible that a strong wave of sympathy for Bhutto's death would have an impact on the election results for her party, the Pakistan People's Party.

Speaking in the news release he said, "On the other hand, it is the case that the PPP was really a personal vehicle for Benazir Bhutto. She was the headliner of the party, and there is no second political leader who compares with her in terms of stature within the PPP. It's difficult to see how the PPP will carry on without her. The future of the party is very much in question."

In the longer term, Echeverri-Gent said in the news release that the assassination removes the leader who had been seen by the Bush administration as representing a more democratic current for Pakistan.

He said, "The Bush administration had pursued the strategy of encouraging an entente between Gen. Musharaff, who in the eyes of the Bush administration represented stability and the possibility of fighting Islamic terrorism in Pakistan, and Benazir Bhutto, who in the Bush administration's eyes represented a more democratic current. The hope was that an alliance would move Pakistan in the direction of a more liberal, democratic and yet secure society."

"That strategy," Echeverri-Gent said, "goes up in smoke at this point."

 

 

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