Updated 07:54 am.EST, Mon November 23, 2009

World|Sat, Dec. 29 2007 09:39 AM EST

Pakistani Christians Condemn Bhutto Assasination

By Michelle Vu|Christian Post Reporter

Pakistani Christians strongly condemned the killing of former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, who they call a voice for the poor and democracy.

  • Bhutto
    (Photo: AP Images / Emilio Morenatti)
    Supporters of slain opposition leader Benazir Bhutto hold photos of her as they march during a demonstration in Rawalpindi near Islamabad, Saturday, Dec. 29, 2007. Mass rioting following the assassination of opposition leader Benazir Bhutto has led to the deaths of 38 people and caused tens of millions of dollars in damage, the government said Saturday.

Nazir S. Bhatti, the president of Pakistan Christian Congress, recalled meeting Bhutto when she was not prime minister of Pakistan, but said she had expressed concern about Pakistani Christians and vowed to “pull them in mainstream politics.”

It is said that Bhutto had a Catholic nun as a home teacher in Pakistan and as a result had great respect for the Christian faith and sought to protect religious minorities

“Benazir was a great leader and symbol of moderate Islam and challenge for militants,” said Bhatti, following Bhutto’s assassination on Thursday.

“Pakistani Christians extend grief on death of Benazir Bhutto and demand immediate arrest of culprits and justice,” he said.

Yet current political and social upheaval in Pakistan over her death makes it hard to estimate when and how her attacker will be prosecuted.

Within the last 36 hours since her death on Thursday, the Pakistan government has offered three different explanations on how she died.

The latest is that Bhutto died from a skull fracture by hitting her head on the lever on the sunroof of her vehicle. Previous explanations are that she died from shrapnel from the suicide bomb and that the ex-prime minister died from a bullet wound to the neck.

Bhutto’s Pakistan Peoples Party has refuted official versions of the incident and accused the government of offering “a pack of lies,” according to CNN.

Ken Robinson, CNN national security analyst, said he suspects Bhutto’s enemies are trying to deny her a martyr’s death, which in Islam is “pretty important.” Her death might make her more influential than she was in life, he noted.

Her party has also accused the government for lapse of security.

Bhatti also blamed the Pakistan government for Bhutto’s death.

“[The] death of BB (Benazir Bhutto) is grave challenge to government on safety and security of people of Pakistan and total failure of establishment.

“It was responsibility of government to secure life of Benazir Bhutto but it seems that security measures were neglected and such sad incident happened,” he said.


Pakistan Christian Congress has declared Dec. 27, 2007 as “Black Day” in the history of Pakistan in observance of Bhutto’s death. Bhutto was the first female prime minister of any Islamic nation.

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  • oppu »
    Sun Jan 27, 2008 9:40 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Goodbye,
    Warrior of Democracy...

    (For Former Pakistan Prime Minister,
    Benazir Bhutto, and the family she left.)


    “A friend loves at all times,
    and a brother is born for adversity.
    Greater love has no one than this,
    that he lay down his life
    for his friends”
    (Proverbs 17:17 and John 15:13)

    And we are your friends, Bhutto!
    Friends in struggling for democracy enforcement
    Friends in struggling for fighting wickedness
    Friends in struggling against poverty
    Friends in struggling for human values

    “Better a patient man
    than a warrior”
    (Proverbs 16:32a)

    And you are a patient woman, Bhutto!
    Patient in getting education
    Patient in friendships
    Patient in struggling with family
    Patient in turbulence and fight
    Patient in going through a period in exile.

    “a man who controls his temper than
    one who takes a city.”
    (Proverbs 16:32b)

    And you are a woman who
    controls yourself, Bhutto!
    When there was a compromise bargaining
    for the sake of power,
    you’d better choose your inner self
    for the sake of democracy.

    When death threatening came on and on,
    you fought against it not with anger,
    but with a statesmanship smile
    with calm and rigidity.

    When your coming home from exile
    stained by the damned with suicide bombs
    that killed hundreds of lives and
    hurt hundreds of people,
    you stayed unshaken and affirmed more and more
    to run for leader of country.

    When your dad was hung,
    you cried with a rigid spirit.
    At that time you were a student.
    There was no revenge in your heart,
    but God vision planted inside.

    You appeared as a charismatic heroine
    The first and youngest woman
    who leads Pakistan people
    in various struggles.

    Now you went away and left us
    by projectiles piercing your neck and chest
    followed by spilling blood, screaming and shouting
    tens of people endangering their lives
    and tens of people hurt.

    We shout in fury and anger,
    but your smile looks like saying,
    “Be patient and have a rigid spirit... democracy
    needs a heart that is full of love.”

    Goodbye, our warrior
    you are the heroine, warrior of democracy...
    Your fighting spirit stays flaming in heart!!

    ***

    By: Syarif Oppusunggu (From: Indonesia)

  • Sat Dec 29, 2007 5:23 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    If security was an issue, why did she risk re-exposing herself from the roof of the vehicle?

    It was not hidden from anyone that she was a target. She stood in defiance of her enemys to the very end.

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