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Taseer, Bhatti victims of religious intolerance: Zardari
ISLAMABAD: President Asif Ali Zardari has held religious intolerance responsible for the assassinations of Salman Taseer and Shahbaz Bhatti, saying a small but increasingly belligerent minority is intent on undoing the very principles of tolerance upon which our nation was founded in 1947, according to the President’s oped published in Washington Post.
He wrote: “Two months ago my friend Salman Taseer, the governor of Punjab, was cut down for standing up against religious intolerance and against those who would use debate about our laws to divide our people. On Tuesday, another leading member of the Pakistan People's Party (PPP), Shahbaz Bhatti, the minister for minority affairs and the only Christian in our cabinet, was murdered by extremists tied to al-Qaeda and the Taliban.”
Zardari said that these assassinations painfully reinforced his slain wife Benazir Bhutto’s words and served as a warning that the battle between extremism and moderation in Pakistan affected the success of the civilized world's confrontation with the terrorist menace.
“A small but increasingly belligerent minority is intent on undoing the very principles of tolerance upon which our nation was founded in 1947; principles by which Pakistan's founder, Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah, lived and died; and principles that are repeated over and over in the Koran. The extremists who murdered my wife and friends are the same who blew up the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad and who have blown up girls' schools in the Swat Valley.”
President Asif Ali Zardari asserted: “We will not be intimidated, nor will we retreat,” adding, such acts will not deter the government from our calibrated and consistent efforts to eliminate extremism and terrorism. It is not only the future of Pakistan that is at stake but peace in our region and possibly the world.
He said Pakistan’s nation is pressed by overlapping threats. “We have lost more soldiers in the war against terrorism than all of NATO combined. We have lost 10 times the number of civilians who died on Sept. 11, 2001. Two thousand police officers have been killed. Our economic growth was stifled by the priorities of past dictatorial regimes that unfortunately were supported by the West. The worst floods in our history put millions out of their homes.”
Zardari said the religious fanaticism behind Pakistan’s assassinations is a tinderbox poised to explode across Pakistan. The embers are fanned by the opportunism of those who seek advantages in domestic politics by violently polarizing society, he added.
“If Pakistan and the United States are to work together against terrorism, we must avoid political incidents that could further inflame tensions and provide extremists or opportunists with a pretext for destabilizing our fledgling democracy.”
He said the Raymond Davis incident in Lahore, which directly resulted in the deaths of three Pakistani men and the suicide of a Pakistani woman, is a prime example of the unanticipated consequences of problematic behavior.
“We need not go into the legal, moral and political intricacies of this case. Suffice it to say that the actions of Davis and others like him inflame passions in our country and undermine respect and support for the United States among our people. We are committed to peaceful adjudication of the Davis case in accordance with the law.”
He termed as counterproductive the threats to apply sanctions to Pakistan over the Davis affair by cutting off Kerry-Lugar development funds that were designed to build infrastructure, strengthen education and create jobs. “It is a threat, written out of the playbook of America's enemies, whose only result will be to undermine U.S. strategic interests in South and Central Asia, he added.
President Zardari said in an incendiary environment, hot rhetoric and dysfunctional warnings could start fires that will be difficult to extinguish.
Courtesy www.geo.tv
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