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Bhutto is an emotion, a love, says Bilawal

Benazir’s son launches political career on her death anniversary; vows to continue her fight for poor and against anti-democratic forces

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The son of Pakistan’s slain former prime minister Benazir Bhutto launched his political career on Thursday on the anniversary of his mother’s death, vowing to continue her fight for democracy.
More than 200,000 people gathered at the Bhutto family mausoleum in Garhi Khuda Bakhsh in the southern province of Sindh to pay their respects to Benazir and to hear Bilawal Bhutto Zardari make his first major public speech.

Bhutto, twice elected prime minister, was killed in a gun and suicide attack after an election rally in Rawalpindi on December 27, 2007. No one has ever been convicted of her murder.

In an impassioned speech amid tight security, Bilawal — the third generation of his family to go into politics — promised to continuea the fight for the poor and against "anti-democratic forces".
"Bhutto is an emotion, a love," he said. "Every challenge is soaked in blood, but you will be the loser. How ever many Bhuttos you kill, more Bhuttos will emerge from every house."

The Bhutto family has been a force in Pakistani politics for nearly all of the country’s 65-year history.

Benazir’s father Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, who founded the PPP, led the country from 1971 until he was ousted in a military coup in 1977. He was hanged in 1979 after being convicted of authorising the murder of a political opponent.

The Bhuttos are an almost ever-present element in the rhetoric of PPP leaders, who frequently eulogise the party’s two "martyrs" as champions of the common man’s struggle against a repressive "establishment".

Security for Oxford-educated Bilawal’s speech was tight — surveillance helicopters hovered overhead and police said more than 15,000 officers had been deployed, as well as some 500 government paramilitary forces.

A general election is due in the spring and though the 24-year-old will be too young to stand — the lower age limit is 25 — he could act as a figurehead for the campaign. President Zardari, who came to power in elections held a month after his wife’s murder, is barred from leading the PPP election campaign.

Bilawal also took aim at Pakistan’s vocal Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, demanding to know why the Supreme Court could find time to deal with issues such as compressed gas and sugar prices but not punish his mother’s killers.

"I asked the top judge, can’t you see the blood of Benazir Bhutto on the roads of Rawalpindi?" Bilawal said.

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