What's new

Pakistan's Foreign Minister - Bilawal Bhutto Zardari

Major

ODI Star
Joined
Aug 28, 2013
Runs
35,725
Post of the Week
7
Just like Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto saab, Bilawal starts his political career as the countrys foreign minister.

He took part in a democratic oath taking ceremony where the President belinging from PTI, Pm belonging from PMLN and Foreign Minister from PPP sat together.

It was interesting to note that while pti has issues with pmln, they dont have problems with ppp as the president came for the oath ceremony.

Now that the foreign ministry is in good hands, let us wait and see whether our foreign policy improves or not
 
Why do you think it is in good hands? He is the least qualified person for the job at a time when there is a crisis in Afghanistan, crisis in Ukraine and Russia and China will likely be rattled by the death of three of their citizens.

Is he qualified to hold one of the highest offices of state at such a critical stage in global geo politics?

Its a sad day for Pakistan.
 
Just like Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto saab, Bilawal starts his political career as the countrys foreign minister.

He took part in a democratic oath taking ceremony where the President belinging from PTI, Pm belonging from PMLN and Foreign Minister from PPP sat together.

It was interesting to note that while pti has issues with pmln, they dont have problems with ppp as the president came for the oath ceremony.

Now that the foreign ministry is in good hands, let us wait and see whether our foreign policy improves or not

After becoming FM, ZAB started working on breaking of the country and was successful in 7 years, lets see what Billo does .

ZAB was not the only one responsible for the separation of East Pakistan but he was the main character .
 
Can't think of a more spoon fed person in Pakistani politics. I would love to see him exposed to situations when he has to do everything on his own without being dependent on his father and the Sharif's.
 
Problem is he will use "on the job training" to up himself.

Whatever happens, we lose.
 
Just like Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto saab, Bilawal starts his political career as the countrys foreign minister.

He took part in a democratic oath taking ceremony where the President belinging from PTI, Pm belonging from PMLN and Foreign Minister from PPP sat together.

It was interesting to note that while pti has issues with pmln, they dont have problems with ppp as the president came for the oath ceremony.

Now that the foreign ministry is in good hands, let us wait and see whether our foreign policy improves or not

Is he going to talk about the murder of journalists by him and his party.
 
After becoming FM, ZAB started working on breaking of the country and was successful in 7 years, lets see what Billo does .

ZAB was not the only one responsible for the separation of East Pakistan but he was the main character .

Ok US pakistani... I think there are many other threads to whine about ZAB
 
Problem is he will use "on the job training" to up himself.

Whatever happens, we lose.

Didnt our last pm do on the job training which caused him making many mistakes that he later on had to admit to some?
 
Hopefully his first action item is to go after vice for this blasphemous piece!

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/BM41UsQ9CsQ" title="YouTube video player" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
Nooras complained they IK made Pakistan the laughing stock of the world. Just watch what this idiot is goona do.
 
How fitting that Bilawal will be reporting to Shehbaz Sharif (the person who wanted to drag his father across the streets) and the brother of Nawaz Sharif who Bilawal used to call Ghaddar and Modi ka yaar
 
Nooras complained they IK made Pakistan the laughing stock of the world. Just watch what this idiot is goona do.

Dont worry, no pakistani is gonna top off imran visiting russia while putin launched an attack on ukraine.
 
Just like Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto saab, Bilawal starts his political career as the countrys foreign minister.

He took part in a democratic oath taking ceremony where the President belinging from PTI, Pm belonging from PMLN and Foreign Minister from PPP sat together.

It was interesting to note that while pti has issues with pmln, they dont have problems with ppp as the president came for the oath ceremony.

Now that the foreign ministry is in good hands, let us wait and see whether our foreign policy improves or not

This guy is not Bhutto. He is Zardari. He only misuses the name Bhutto to get votes and symphaties.

Didn’t he call Nawaz Shareef son of Zi ul Haq? And wasn’t it Zia who got ZAB hanged, so how can a Bhutto sit in a gov with PML-N? He is a fake Bhutto.

Kidhar gai ghairat?
 
The full effect of the Motley crew in effect. No wonder Pakistan foreign is a shambles when you have sell outs, with no morals representing.
 
And to think we lost the capable seasoned politician shah mehmood qureshi for this idiot .
 
With what conviction will he argue Pakistan's case on the international level when he allowed his lawmakers to get away with murdering an innocent man on the orders of Emiratis. BBZ only represents feudalism and nepotism. There is no need to celebrate a despicable man like BBZ.
 
Congratulations to Bilawal on landing his first gig. The country is doomed regardless of who is in charge anyway because those who are actually in charge will forever be in charge.
 
Congratulations to Bilawal on landing his first gig. The country is doomed regardless of who is in charge anyway because those who are actually in charge will forever be in charge.

Hmm, i never knew being an mna was not a job.
 
Major

What are are your expectations from Bilawal in this role?

Specifically what areas do you want him to address and how will you judge his success or failure.
 
Major

What are are your expectations from Bilawal in this role?

Specifically what areas do you want him to address and how will you judge his success or failure.

Let's see if he can surpass his predecessor who called Modi a Hindu dravidian supremacist.

The lemurians in India were so confused that day flinging poo at each other sitting on tree tops.
 
And to think we lost the capable seasoned politician shah mehmood qureshi for this idiot .

If the fake pir was capable and seasoned, he would have advised Imran from going to Russia which sealed his fate.

SMQ was a disastrous foreign minister. Time for him to go back to Multan and resume his fake pir business.
 
Major

What are are your expectations from Bilawal in this role?

Specifically what areas do you want him to address and how will you judge his success or failure.

For the fm it is important in current world to keep a balance approached. With tensions escalating, pakistan cant afford to just side with one person and completely ignore anyone.

Another thing is, there is mistrust between the ministery of foreign affairs and the political govt because of imran leaking and escalating cables.

Bilawal is a mature person who probably understand how the cables work.

His success and failiure will depend how he plays this balance
 
If the fake pir was capable and seasoned, he would have advised Imran from going to Russia which sealed his fate.

SMQ was a disastrous foreign minister. Time for him to go back to Multan and resume his fake pir business.

You shouldnt argue with [MENTION=154102]mazkhan[/MENTION] he calls bilawal an idiot, but he himself believes that kidnappings in pakistan of young girls is a conspiracy to remove attention from imran
 
If I had a choice between qureshi and BBZ, I would pick the latter any day.

We don't need a wannabe pir as foreign minister.
 
If the fake pir was capable and seasoned, he would have advised Imran from going to Russia which sealed his fate.

SMQ was a disastrous foreign minister. Time for him to go back to Multan and resume his fake pir business.

Worse than the loser that got stumped by a friendly question on CNN sbout Dynastic politics? This cretin can't defend himself, how the hell can he defend PK.
 
Hopefully his first action item is to go after vice for this blasphemous piece!

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/BM41UsQ9CsQ" title="YouTube video player" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>
[MENTION=135038]Major[/MENTION] any comment about this?
 
Worse than the loser that got stumped by a friendly question on CNN sbout Dynastic politics? This cretin can't defend himself, how the hell can he defend PK.

That interview was no different than imrans ughyr interview
 
That interview was no different than imrans ughyr interview

But the shoe is on the other foot now bro.

Thread is about Bilawal and his ability to represent Pakistan at the global stage. If his CNN interview is anything to go by, his on the job training isnt going that good.
 
That interview was no different than imrans ughyr interview

You continue to defend crooks and turn a blind eye in threads that are asking you to explain the $1.5b stolen by PPP.
Why so?
 
But the shoe is on the other foot now bro.

Thread is about Bilawal and his ability to represent Pakistan at the global stage. If his CNN interview is anything to go by, his on the job training isnt going that good.

Also - what exactly is Bilawal's qualification for this job?

Is it wise to put someone who has no experience in such a role?

Wouldnt someone like Khar be a better choice?
 
That interview was no different than imrans ughyr interview

IK owns the press and has to answer very tough questions which every decision maker watches. This guy outside the Wadera of Sindh and few losers looking for crumbs from his Daddies table, has no public profile. His English was poor and at his pathetic attempt at evasion of a question that every man and his dog knew was coming was the equivalent of the dog chewed my HW.
 
ANALYSIS: BILAWAL’S BIG BREAK

No doubt that Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari’s first government job will be a trial by fire. The son of Benazir and Asif, who became foreign minister on Wednesday, will face a host of challenges as he takes up duties at the Foreign Office; be it fraying ties with one global superpower or the recent cooling of Islamabad’s relationship with our massive neighbour to the northeast. Allegations of a US-backed conspiracy and the deteriorating ties with an increasingly right-wing India will also be nipping at the heels of the young prodigy.

Surrounded by family members and political supporters — all beaming with pride — Bilawal took oath as the country’s youngest foreign minister. The occasion was so momentous that even his normally camera-shy aunt, Sanam Bhutto, came out to witness it.

But even as the young Bilawal, who some have already started comparing to his grandfather, Zulfikar, said his hellos and made his way down the corridors of the Foreign Office building on Constitution Avenue, the expectant eyes who followed his gait were all thinking the same thing…

Can this 33-year-old rescue Pakistan from the dire straits it finds itself in, internationally?

Those close to the prodigious PPP leader say the variety of voices in his close circle could serve him well at a time Pakistan’s foreign policy is in dire straits

His close aides, party colleagues and fellow members of parliament agree that taking charge of the foreign ministry would be a mammoth ask for the young man. But there are two sides to this coin.

On one hand, Bilawal’s family legacy and his international profile give him a distinct advantage; but on the other, his lack of diplomatic experience could be counterproductive to Islamabad’s cause at the global stage.

In background interviews, aides to Mr Bhutto-Zardari, senior PPP leaders and those who are close to the party chairman believe that this position could be a chance he needed to make his own name, in both national and international politics.

The Oxford graduate, they say, has learned most of the tricks of the trade and now would be the time to put his skills to the test.

Father’s ‘guiding hand’

“The perception that he’s heavily under the influence of his father and takes each and every decision as per his guidance, it is absolutely incorrect,” says a senior party leader.

“Not just once or twice, rather I have personally seen him disagreeing with his father on several issues, and the party finally takes a consensus decision under the opinion developed by the chairman. You would see him the same way on the [foreign policy] front as well,” he said, indicating that the young chairman has his own way of approaching various issues, which some may even regard as ‘unconventional’.

An example of this would be the Nov 2020 Gilgit-Baltistan election campaign; it was Bilawal’s idea to lead the campaign himself, despite resistance from some quarters within the party.

Those resisting even tried to get Asif Zardari to dissuade the PPP chairman for engaging himself in this “low-profile” political activity. But even then, Mr Zardari wasn’t able to prevail upon his son, who went ahead and campaigned aggressively.

Variety of voices

Apart from the party’s central executive committee, senior leaders and his mother’s old confidants, Mr Bhutto-Zardari also has the support of a fiercely loyal circle of close young friends from all walks of life.

“You will find lawyers, rights activists, digital media experts and even journalists [among his inner circle],” says one of his aides.

“You can call them like-minded people, but they are not leaders or activists. He talks to them, hears them and even consults them for advice. He’s a smart man and the best thing about this smartness is that he never let you feel how intelligent he’s. He always hears you out, gives weight to your opinion and is always ready for disagreement or debate. That variety of voices in his inner circle helps him understand and keep track of the world outside the party,” the aide says.

The aide adds that although there is a long list of problems in front of him on the international front, if Bilawal manages to fix even three out of 10 major issues, his term will be seem as a success and he will be able to establish himself as an asset to Pakistani politics.

Right now, Islamabad badly needs someone who can carry out hectic shuttle diplomacy, from both traditional and backchannels, to help stabilise the country’s standing in the global community, which has taken a hit of late.

Success in Sindh versus performance on global front

But if Bilawal is as smart as the aide would have us believe, why has he failed to address the systemic issues that have been plaguing Sindh for the nearly 14 years that his party has been in power there. Why are there growing questions over its governance and serious charges of corruption against his party’s regime and if he couldn’t do much about that, how would the PPP chairman fare any differently as foreign minister?

These questions haunt many, both in and out of government. But for those who matter within the party, the governance in Sindh and success on the foreign policy front are two absolutely different things.

On the local front, he has to compromise on a lot of things — some matters are best left untouched.

But, insiders say, if he does the same in his new role, there is a chance that things may slip through the cracks and damage not just his hold over his ministry but also Pakistan’s already precarious standing within the global community.

Benazir’s son

PPP leaders who are sincerely happy with Bilawal’s appointment as foreign minister include a large number of those who were once trusted aides to his mother, and they have their own reasons to be happy.

“I am happy more for Pakistan than for Bilawal, to be honest,” says a senior PPP leader, who was once considered very close to Benazir Bhutto and held most constitutional positions while the party was in government.

“To the outside world, he doesn’t need to introduce himself; who he is and where he has come from — the world already knows him quite well. Now, it’ll be a test of his skills and political grooming, and I am very optimistic that he won’t disappoint Pakistan.”

The leader says that dozens of foreign ministers and several prime ministers had come and gone, but no one had enjoyed more respect and honour in the history of Pakistan’s politics than the Bhuttos.

“I know him and I see what a good grip he has on crucial issues; secondly, he knows how to assert himself. He is also extremely articulate and can put across Pakistan’s point of view very forcefully.”

The leader, who has followed Mr Bhutto-Zardari’s career every step of the way, relates a brilliant anecdote to substantiate his optimism.

“I remember it was in May 2016, when Bilawal embarked on his first-ever road show from Islamabad to Mirpur in Azad Jammu and Kashmir. The day after his rally in Muzaffarabad, I was in Multan at [former prime minister Yousuf Raza] Gilani’s residence when Mr Gilani came to me and showed his cellphone. There was a message from Hilary Clinton. The message read: ‘I just saw Bilawal on TV and he sounds just like his mother. Tell him I said good luck and I hope he achieves the success his mother was trying to achieve’.”

Published in Dawn, April 28th, 2022
 
Making Bilawal Foreign Minister and Hina Rabbani Khar the Minister of State (aka Junior Foreign Minster) is an insult to her. She actually did a good job as FM and I would have liked her to get the job again. Bilawal should have been the Junior Minister, however his ego would not let that happen.
 
There was a message from Hilary Clinton. The message read: ‘I just saw Bilawal on TV and he sounds just like his mother. Tell him I said good luck and I hope he achieves the success his mother was trying to achieve’.”
.
 
Making Bilawal Foreign Minister and Hina Rabbani Khar the Minister of State (aka Junior Foreign Minster) is an insult to her. She actually did a good job as FM and I would have liked her to get the job again. Bilawal should have been the Junior Minister, however his ego would not let that happen.

But she was #not_in_the_room!
 
But she was #not_in_the_room!

That was pretty embarrassing when Mehdi Hasan said what does say about your status in the government. However I believe her. As vile as Zardari and Gilani are, they know those type of comments need to be said in private. However thanks to Wiki Leaks we were able to find out.
 
This guy is not Bhutto. He is Zardari. He only misuses the name Bhutto to get votes and symphaties.

Didn’t he call Nawaz Shareef son of Zi ul Haq? And wasn’t it Zia who got ZAB hanged, so how can a Bhutto sit in a gov with PML-N? He is a fake Bhutto.

Kidhar gai ghairat?

The bolded part, waiting for your reply on this [MENTION=135038]Major[/MENTION]
 
Just like Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto saab, Bilawal starts his political career as the countrys foreign minister.

He took part in a democratic oath taking ceremony where the President belinging from PTI, Pm belonging from PMLN and Foreign Minister from PPP sat together.

It was interesting to note that while pti has issues with pmln, they dont have problems with ppp as the president came for the oath ceremony.

Now that the foreign ministry is in good hands, let us wait and see whether our foreign policy improves or not

He is just another product of dynastic politics. He seems as incompetent as Rahul Gandhi here.
Hence the projected answer is NO
 
Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari sought to strengthen a “mutually beneficial and broad-based” relationship with the United States in a maiden telephone call with his American counterpart Anthony Blinken on Friday.

Using his Twitter handle, Bilawal said he had received the telephone from Secretary Blinken, who felicitated him on his assumption of the Foreign Office.

Saying he was grateful for “warm felicitations”, the foreign minister said he had exchanged views with the US secretary on “strengthening mutually beneficial and broad-based relationship” with the United States.

The two foreign ministers also discussed the promotion of peace, development and security. “Agreed engagement with mutual respect is the way forward,” Bilawal added.

This was the first telephonic conversation between the Pakistani foreign minister and the US Secretary of State in nine months. The last time Blinken spoke to Shah Mehmood Qureshi was in August 2021 when the US-led foreign forces were withdrawing from Afghanistan.

Secretary Blinken’s telephone call to the new foreign minister came amid no let-up in former Prime Minister Imran Khan’s allegations that he was ousted from power through a US-backed conspiracy.

The coalition government led by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has decided to form an “independent commission” to look into the allegations but Imran has rejected the proposal and sought a judicial commission on the matter.

The controversy revolves around a diplomatic cable the then Pakistani ambassador in Washington sent to the Foreign Office on March 7. The cable was based on Ambassador Asad Majid’s conversation with US Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Donald Lu.

In that cable, according to Imran, the US official "threatened" Pakistan of dire consequences if the vote of no confidence against the PTI leader did not succeed. The former premier claimed that he was ousted from power because he had pursued an independent foreign policy and undertook a visit to Russia despite the US opposition.

The National Security Committee (NSC), the country’s highest forum on such matters, met twice – first on March 31 when Imran was still the premier and second on April 22 when Shehbaz Sharif was the country’s chief executive. In both meetings, the NSC agreed that the language used by the American official was undiplomatic and tantamount to ‘blatant interference’ but found no evidence to suggest that there was a conspiracy against Imran Khan.

The PTI chairman, nevertheless, has kept building this narrative that the NSC has endorsed his claims. The controversy has complicated the already fraught relationship between Pakistan and the US.

The new government, however, has been trying to bring some semblance of certainty with statements underlining the importance of a relationship with the West particularly with the United States.

The US officials have also issued statements in favour of engagement with Pakistan. The latest telephone call, observers believe, suggests the eagerness from both sides to reset their troubled ties.

Despite the US pullout of Afghanistan, Washington still has stakes in the neighbouring country given that any instability would allow terrorist groups to regroup that may not just pose threat to the region but the US interests too.

Pakistan is worried over the recent spike in cross-border terrorist attacks from Afghanistan and considers counter-terrorism cooperation vital to deny the banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and other groups space in Afghanistan.

Express Tribune
 
Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari sought to strengthen a “mutually beneficial and broad-based” relationship with the United States in a maiden telephone call with his American counterpart Anthony Blinken on Friday.

Using his Twitter handle, Bilawal said he had received the telephone from Secretary Blinken, who felicitated him on his assumption of the Foreign Office.

Saying he was grateful for “warm felicitations”, the foreign minister said he had exchanged views with the US secretary on “strengthening mutually beneficial and broad-based relationship” with the United States.

The two foreign ministers also discussed the promotion of peace, development and security. “Agreed engagement with mutual respect is the way forward,” Bilawal added.

This was the first telephonic conversation between the Pakistani foreign minister and the US Secretary of State in nine months. The last time Blinken spoke to Shah Mehmood Qureshi was in August 2021 when the US-led foreign forces were withdrawing from Afghanistan.

Secretary Blinken’s telephone call to the new foreign minister came amid no let-up in former Prime Minister Imran Khan’s allegations that he was ousted from power through a US-backed conspiracy.

The coalition government led by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has decided to form an “independent commission” to look into the allegations but Imran has rejected the proposal and sought a judicial commission on the matter.

The controversy revolves around a diplomatic cable the then Pakistani ambassador in Washington sent to the Foreign Office on March 7. The cable was based on Ambassador Asad Majid’s conversation with US Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Donald Lu.

In that cable, according to Imran, the US official "threatened" Pakistan of dire consequences if the vote of no confidence against the PTI leader did not succeed. The former premier claimed that he was ousted from power because he had pursued an independent foreign policy and undertook a visit to Russia despite the US opposition.

The National Security Committee (NSC), the country’s highest forum on such matters, met twice – first on March 31 when Imran was still the premier and second on April 22 when Shehbaz Sharif was the country’s chief executive. In both meetings, the NSC agreed that the language used by the American official was undiplomatic and tantamount to ‘blatant interference’ but found no evidence to suggest that there was a conspiracy against Imran Khan.

The PTI chairman, nevertheless, has kept building this narrative that the NSC has endorsed his claims. The controversy has complicated the already fraught relationship between Pakistan and the US.

The new government, however, has been trying to bring some semblance of certainty with statements underlining the importance of a relationship with the West particularly with the United States.

The US officials have also issued statements in favour of engagement with Pakistan. The latest telephone call, observers believe, suggests the eagerness from both sides to reset their troubled ties.

Despite the US pullout of Afghanistan, Washington still has stakes in the neighbouring country given that any instability would allow terrorist groups to regroup that may not just pose threat to the region but the US interests too.

Pakistan is worried over the recent spike in cross-border terrorist attacks from Afghanistan and considers counter-terrorism cooperation vital to deny the banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and other groups space in Afghanistan.

Express Tribune

Billo must have been so excited that big daddy called him and told him that he was doing the job he was planted to do. This useless Bikhari that cant string a sentence together and has never earnt a halal penny in his life, dreams about leading a country of 220mn with foreign help.
 
Seems being invited by the US to visit is a huge feather in his cap!
 
ISLAMABAD: Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari is expected to pay a visit to the United States by the mid of this month, The News reported Monday.

Diplomatic sources said that it would be Bilawal's first official visit as the foreign minister of Pakistan on the invitation of US Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

During the trip, FM Bilawal would meet Blinken and other US officials, while Minister of State on Foreign Affairs Hina Rabbani Khar may accompany the foreign minister as a part of his delegation.

Bilawal has been invited to participate in the “Global Food Security” meeting on May 18.

Blinken on Friday made a maiden telephone call to the newly appointed FM and extended an invitation to him to visit the US this month, the Foreign Office said.

During the telephonic conversation, Secretary Blinken congratulated his Pakistani counterpart on the assumption of his office and expressed the desire to continue strengthening the mutually beneficial Pakistan-US bilateral relationship.

Bilawal's US visit would be the first high-level interaction between the two countries amid the PTI's anti-American narrative. Former prime minister Imran Khan has blamed Washington for toppling his government. The US has denied the allegations.

GEO
 
Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari on Monday sought to further strengthen Pakistan’s “all weather strategic partnership” with China, including through the “rapid implementation” of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), a flagship project of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) of President Xi Jinping.

Also Bilawal on Monday joined the Foreign Office formally for the first time after taking oath as the foreign minister on April 27. He could not attend the office since swearing in as he first travelled with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif to Saudi Arabia and then spent time in Dubai during Eid holidays.

Apart from chairing the introductory meeting at the Foreign Office, the PPP chairman addressed the high-level Meeting of the Group of Friends of the Global Development Initiative (GDI), held in virtual format in New York.

President Xi Jinping of China had put forward the Global Development Initiative during his address to the 76th session of the UN General Assembly in September 2021.In January 2022, China launched a Group of Friends of GDI in New York – which was joined by Pakistan and more than 50 other countries – as an informal cooperation and coordination mechanism for strengthening policy dialogue, sharing best practices, and promoting practical cooperation on realizing the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to advance the objectives of GDI.


A statement issued by the Foreign Office said Bilawal reaffirmed Pakistan’s resolve to further strengthen its All-Weather Strategic Cooperative Partnership with China, including through the rapid implementation of the CPEC, a flagship project of the BRI.

“Pakistan will continue its efforts to enhance cooperation with China through CPEC, to advance its national implementation of SDGs, in addition to participating actively in the work of the GDI Group of Friends to promote the common aspiration of a peaceful, prosperous and shared future for all mankind,” the statement quoted the foreign minister as saying.

In his video address, Bilawal appreciated China’s initiative to launch GDI and termed it a useful platform to accelerate and coordinate efforts for implementing the globally agreed Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

Recalling the multiple crises posed by the Covid-19 pandemic, climate change and geo-political developments, with disproportionate and devastating impacts on the Global South, the foreign minister expressed deep concern over the reversal of progress in the implementation of SDGs.

He urged the GDI Group of Friends to address the challenges faced by the developing world and support emergency actions to increase cooperation in public health and vaccine equity, ensure food security, enhance energy production, promote global green economy, stimulate trade and industrialisation, and eliminate the digital divide.

The foreign minister, noting that the multiple crises had enlarged the gap in financing for development, called upon the international community to mobilise adequate resources for SDGs and fulfill the commitment of providing at least $100 billion annually in climate finance.

Express Tribune
 
ISLAMABAD: Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari Wednesday addressed a letter to the president of the United Nations Security Council and the UN's secretary-general regarding India's ploy of reducing the representation of Muslims through the unlawful "delimitation" exercise in the Indian Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IOJK), a statement by the foreign ministry said.

Pakistan continues to internationally highlight the alarming situation in the IOJK in the wake of India’s illegal and unilateral actions on August 5 2019.

According to the statement, Bilawal underscored that these illegal measures constitute a flagrant violation of international law, including the UN Charter, and said the relevant Security Council resolutions on the Jammu and Kashmir dispute were ipso facto illegal and null and void.

Highlighting India’s gross, systematic and widespread human rights violations in IOJK, Bilawal also drew particular attention to the ongoing Indian efforts to further marginalise, disempower, and divide the beleaguered Kashmiri population.

He noted that this was a shameless assault on the identity, fundamental rights of the people, and culture of IOJK, and was designed to pave the way for installing yet another puppet government in IOJK that is pliant to BJP-RSS combine, and panders to its “Hindutva” ideology.

He also emphasised that under the garb of this inherently ill-intentioned process, India had attempted to carry out demographic engineering in the IOJK in a bid to convert Muslim majority constituencies into Hindu-majority ones.

"Through the sham 'delimitation’ exercise, it is obvious that India is aiming to speed up the process of demographic changes that it has already set in motion through measures such as doling out millions of domicile certificates, offering jobs, and putting up land in IOJK for sale to non-Kashmiris, in complete disregard to the international law and relevant Geneva Conventions," he said.

He urged the UN Security Council:

To remind India that Jammu and Kashmir remain an internationally recognised dispute pending resolution and that India should refrain from bringing about any illegal demographic changes in the occupied territory in contravention to international law, the Geneva Conventions, and India’s own obligations under the relevant UN Security Council resolutions.
To compel and counsel India to halt its human rights abuses against the people of IIOJK and cease forthwith the endemic political persecution and economic exploitation of the Kashmiris.
To prevail upon India to let the people of IIOJK determine their own future through a free and fair plebiscite under the United Nations auspices as enshrined in the relevant UN Security Council resolutions.

GEO
 
Hopefully his first action item is to go after vice for this blasphemous piece!

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/BM41UsQ9CsQ" title="YouTube video player" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>

Major saab conveniently side steeped this...

Just recalling some other of the so called clean Ms. Bhutto adventures outside of Pakistan.

Panama Papers: Benazir Bhutto's oil firm paid huge bribes to Iraqi President Saddam Hussain for contracts
Ali Zain09:50 AM | 4 Apr, 2016
Panama Papers: Benazir Bhutto's oil firm paid huge bribes to Iraqi President Saddam Hussain for contracts

LAHORE (Staff Report) - Panama Papers -a 2.6 terabyte confidential leak that comprises of details of shady businesses of global elite families and politician- are definitely a matter worth worrying about for Pakistan, as two of the country's most powerful political families (Bhutto Family and Sharif Family) have also been listed in the leak.
According to documents shared by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, Pakistan's two-time Prime Minister and Chairperson of Pakistan People's Party (PPP) Benazir Bhutto -who was assassinated by Taliban in 2007- was also among the clients of Mossack Fonseca (MF) along with her close aide Senator Rehman Malik and nephew Hassan Ali Jaffery Bhutto.

The leak said that Bhutto and her partners paid huge bribes to then Iraqi government -led by President Saddam Hussain- in 2000 to win oil contracts for their Sharjah based company Petrofine FZC and later established a company named Petroline International Incorporation in British Virgin Islands in 2001.

Mossack Fonseca’s (MF) records suggest that Benazir Bhutto's second company, Petroline International Incorporation, was refused to be accepted as client by the law firm for being a politically sensitive group.



In 2005, an investigation into United Nation’s oil-for-food program in Iraq revealed that Bhutto's firm paid US$ 2 million to President Saddam Hussain and in return they earned oil contracts of worth US$115-145 million. The probe was led by former head of US federal reserves Paul Volker.

In the later year, 2006, Pakistan's National Accountability Bureau (NAB) also claimed that Petrofine FZC was owned by Benazir Bhutto but she and her party, PPP, strongly dismissed the charges and called it an political conspiracy against them.

Mossack Fonseca also revealed that Pakistan's incumbent Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, his sons Hussain Nawaz and Hasan Nawaz, and daughter Mariam Safdar set up at least four offshore companies in British Virgin Islands (BVI). These companies owned at least six upmarket properties overlooking London’s Hyde Park.

Sharif family mortgaged four of these properties to the Deutsche Bank (Suisse) SA for a loan of GBP 7 million and the Bank of Scotland part financed the purchase of two other apartments.
https://en.dailypakistan.com.pk/04-...-iraqi-president-saddam-hussain-for-contracts
 
Amreeka has done mudakhlat on Benazir's behalf in the past as well...

U.S. brokered Bhutto’s return to Pakistan
For Benazir Bhutto, the decision to return to Pakistan was sealed during a phone call from Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice just a week before her return in October. The call culminated more than a year of secret diplomacy — and came only when it became clear she was the only one who could bail out Washington's key ally in the battle against terrorism.

By By Robin Wright and Glenn Kessler
For Benazir Bhutto, the decision to return to Pakistan was sealed during a telephone call from Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice just a week before Bhutto flew home in October. The call culminated more than a year of secret diplomacy — and came only when it became clear that the heir to Pakistan's most powerful political dynasty was the only one who could bail out Washington's key ally in the battle against terrorism.

It was a stunning turnaround for Bhutto, a former prime minister who was forced from power in 1996 amid corruption charges. She was suddenly visiting with top State Department officials, dining with U.N. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad and conferring with members of the National Security Council. As President Pervez Musharraf's political future began to unravel this year, Bhutto became the only politician who might help keep him in power.

"The U.S. came to understand that Bhutto was not a threat to stability but was instead the only possible way that we could guarantee stability and keep the presidency of Musharraf intact," said Mark Siegel, who lobbied for Bhutto in Washington and witnessed much of the behind-the-scenes diplomacy.

But the diplomacy that ended abruptly with Bhutto's assassination yesterday was always an enormous gamble, according to current and former U.S. policymakers, intelligence officials and outside analysts. By entering into the legendary "Great Game" of South Asia, the United States also made its goals and allies more vulnerable — in a country where more than 70 percent of the population already looked unfavorably upon Washington.

‘U.S. policy is in tatters’
Bhutto's assassination leaves Pakistan's future — and Musharraf's — in doubt, some experts said. "U.S. policy is in tatters. The administration was relying on Benazir Bhutto's participation in elections to legitimate Musharraf's continued power as president," said Barnett R. Rubin of New York University. "Now Musharraf is finished."

Bhutto's assassination also demonstrates the growing power and reach of militant anti-government forces in Pakistan, which pose an existential threat to the country, said J. Alexander Thier, a former U.N. official now at the U.S. Institute for Peace. "The dangerous cocktail of forces of instability exist in Pakistan — Talibanism, sectarianism, ethnic nationalism — could react in dangerous and unexpected ways if things unravel further," he said.

But others insist the U.S.-orchestrated deal fundamentally altered Pakistani politics in ways that will be difficult to undo, even though Bhutto is gone. "Her return has helped crack open this political situation. It's now very fluid, which makes it uncomfortable and dangerous," said Isobel Coleman of the Council on Foreign Relations. "But the status quo before she returned was also dangerous from a U.S. perspective. Forcing some movement in the long run was in the U.S. interests."

Bhutto's assassination during a campaign stop in Rawalpindi might even work in favor of her Pakistan People's Party, with parliamentary elections due in less than two weeks, Coleman said. "From the U.S. perspective, the PPP is the best ally the U.S. has in terms of an institution in Pakistan."

Bhutto's political comeback was a long time in the works — and uncertain for much of the past 18 months. In mid-2006, Bhutto and Musharraf started communicating through intermediaries about how they might cooperate. Assistant Secretary of State Richard A. Boucher was often an intermediary, traveling to Islamabad to speak with Musharraf and to Bhutto's homes in London and Dubai to meet with her.

Under U.S. urging, Bhutto and Musharraf met face to face in January and July in Dubai, according to U.S. officials. It was not a warm exchange, with Musharraf resisting a deal to drop corruption charges so she could return to Pakistan. He made no secret of his feelings.

In his 2006 autobiography "In the Line of Fire," Musharraf wrote that Bhutto had "twice been tried, been tested and failed, [and] had to be denied a third chance." She had not allowed her own party to become democratic, he alleged. "Benazir became her party's 'chairperson for life,' in the tradition of the old African dictators!"

A key turning point was Bhutto's three-week U.S. visit in August when she talked again to Boucher and to Khalilzad, an old friend. A former U.S. ambassador in neighboring Afghanistan, Khalilzad had long been skeptical about Musharraf and while in Kabul had disagreed with then-Secretary of State Colin L. Powell over whether the Pakistani leader was being helpful in the fight against the Taliban. He also warned that Pakistani intelligence was allowing the Taliban to regroup in the border areas, U.S. officials said.

Get the Morning Rundown

Get a head start on the morning's top stories.

Enter your email
SIGN UP
THIS SITE IS PROTECTED BY RECAPTCHA PRIVACY POLICY | TERMS OF SERVICE
When Bhutto returned to the United States in September, Khalilzad asked for a lift on her plane from New York to Aspen, where they were both giving speeches. They spent much of the five-hour plane ride strategizing, said sources familiar with the diplomacy.

Recommended

GUNS IN AMERICA
California ban on semiautomatic weapons for those under 21 ruled unconstitutional

U.S. NEWS
Food insecurity rises as families lose child tax credit payments, data shows
Friends say Bhutto asked for U.S. help. "She pitched the idea to the Bush administration," said Peter W. Galbraith, a former U.S. ambassador and friend of Bhutto from their college at Harvard. "She had been prime minister twice and had not been able to accomplish very much because she did not have power over the most important institutions in Pakistan — the ISI [intelligence agency], the military and the nuclear establishment," he said.

"Without controlling those, she couldn't pursue peace with India, go after extremists or transfer funds from the military to social programs," Galbraith said. "Cohabitation with Musharraf made sense because he had control over the three institutions that she never did. This was the one way to accomplish something and create a moderate center."

The turning point to get Musharraf on board was a September trip by Deputy Secretary of State John D. Negroponte to Islamabad. "He basically delivered a message to Musharraf that we would stand by him, but he needed a democratic facade on the government, and we thought Benazir was the right choice for that face," said Bruce Riedel, former CIA and national security council staffer now at the Brookings Institution's Saban Center for Middle East Policy.

"Musharraf still detested her and he came around reluctantly as he began to recognize this fall that his position was untenable," Riedel said. The Pakistani leader had two choices: Bhutto or former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, who Musharraf had overthrown in a 1999 military coup. "Musharraf took what he thought was the lesser of two evils," Riedel said.

Many career foreign policy officials were skeptical of the U.S. plan. "There were many inside the administration, at the State and Defense Departments and in intelligence, who thought this was a bad idea from the beginning because the prospects that the two could work together to run the country effectively were nil," said Riedel.

As part of the deal, Bhutto's party agreed not to protest against Musharraf's reelection in September to his third term. In return, Musharraf agreed to lift the corruption charges against Bhutto. But Bhutto sought one particular guarantee — that Washington would ensure Musharraf followed through on free and fair elections producing a civilian government.

Rice, who became engaged in the final stages of brokering a deal, called Bhutto in Dubai and pledged that Washington would see the process through, according to Siegel. A week later, on Oct. 18, Bhutto returned.

Ten weeks later, she was dead.

Xenia Dormandy, former National Security Council expert on South Asia now at Harvard University's Belfer Center, said U.S. meddling is not to blame for Bhutto's death. "It is very clear the United States encouraged" an agreement, she said, "but U.S. policy is in no way responsible for what happened. I don't think we could have played it differently."

U.S. policy — and the commitment to Musharraf — remains unchanged. In a statement yesterday, Rice appealed to Pakistanis to remain calm and to continue seeking to build a "moderate" democracy.

"I don't think it would do any justice to her memory to have an election postponed or canceled simply as a result of this tragic incident," State Department spokesman Tom Casey told reporters. "The only people that win through such a course of action are the people who perpetrated this attack."

https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna22414361
 
HOUSE OF GRAFT: Tracing the Bhutto Millions -- A special report.; Bhutto Clan Leaves Trail of Corruption



By John F. Burns
Jan. 9, 1998
See the article in its original context from January 9, 1998, Section A, Page 1Buy Reprints
New York Times subscribers* enjoy full access to TimesMachine—view over 150 years of New York Times journalism, as it originally appeared.


A decade after she led this impoverished nation from military rule to democracy, Benazir Bhutto is at the heart of a widening corruption inquiry that Pakistani investigators say has traced more than $100 million to foreign bank accounts and properties controlled by Ms. Bhutto's family.

Starting from a cache of Bhutto family documents bought for $1 million from a shadowy intermediary, the investigators have detailed a pattern of secret payments by foreign companies that sought favors during Ms. Bhutto's two terms as Prime Minister.

The documents leave uncertain the degree of involvement by Ms. Bhutto, a Harvard graduate whose rise to power in 1988 made her the first woman to lead a Muslim country. But they trace the pervasive role of her husband, Asif Ali Zardari, who turned his marriage to Ms. Bhutto into a source of virtually unchallengeable power.

In 1995, a leading French military contractor, Dassault Aviation, agreed to pay Mr. Zardari and a Pakistani partner $200 million for a $4 billion jet fighter deal that fell apart only when Ms. Bhutto's Government was dismissed. In another deal, a leading Swiss company hired to curb customs fraud in Pakistan paid millions of dollars between 1994 and 1996 to offshore companies controlled by Mr. Zardari and Ms. Bhutto's widowed mother, Nusrat.


In the largest single payment investigators have discovered, a gold bullion dealer in the Middle East was shown to have deposited at least $10 million into an account controlled by Mr. Zardari after the Bhutto Government gave him a monopoly on gold imports that sustained Pakistan's jewelry industry. The money was deposited into a Citibank account in the United Arab Emirate of Dubai, one of several Citibank accounts for companies owned by Mr. Zardari.

Together, the documents provided an extraordinarily detailed look at high-level corruption in Pakistan, a nation so poor that perhaps 70 percent of its 130 million people are illiterate, and millions have no proper shelter, no schools, no hospitals, not even safe drinking water. During Ms. Bhutto's five years in power, the economy became so enfeebled that she spent much of her time negotiating new foreign loans to stave off default on $62 billion in public debt.

A worldwide search for properties secretly bought by the Bhutto family is still in its early stages. But the inquiry has already found that Mr. Zardari went on a shopping spree in the mid-1990's, purchasing among other things a $4 million, 355-acre estate south of London. In 1994 and 1995, he used a Swiss bank account and an American Express card to buy jewelry worth $660,000 -- including $246,000 at Cartier Inc. and Bulgari Corp. in Beverly Hills, Calif., in barely a month.

In separate interviews in Karachi, Ms. Bhutto, 44, and Mr. Zardari, 42, declined to address specific questions about the Pakistani inquiry, which they dismissed as a political vendetta by Ms. Bhutto's successor as Prime Minister, Nawaz Sharif. In Karachi Central Prison, where he has been held for 14 months on charges of murdering Ms. Bhutto's brother, Mr. Zardari described the corruption allegations as part of a ''meaningless game.'' But he offered no challenge to the authenticity of the documents tracing some of his most lucrative deals.

Ms. Bhutto originally kindled wild enthusiasms in Pakistan with her populist politics, then suffered a heavy loss of support as the corruption allegations gained credence. In an interview at her fortresslike home set back from Karachi's Arabian Sea beachfront, she was by turns tearful and defiant. ''Most of those documents are fabricated,'' she said, ''and the stories that have been spun around them are absolutely wrong.''


But she refused to discuss any of the specific deals outlined in the documents, and did not explain how her husband had paid for his property and jewelry. Lamenting what she described as ''the irreparable damage done to my standing in the world'' by the corruption inquiry, she said her family had inherited wealth, although not on the scale implied by tales of huge bank deposits and luxury properties overseas.

''I mean, what is poor and what is rich?'' Ms. Bhutto asked. ''If you mean, am I rich by European standards, do I have a billion dollars, or even a hundred million dollars, even half that, no, I do not. But if you mean that I'm ordinary rich, yes, my father had three children studying at Harvard as undergraduates at the same time. But this wealth never meant anything to my brothers or me.''


Ms. Bhutto, a student at Harvard and Oxford for six years in the 1970's, has always presented herself as a tribune of the dispossessed. In a Harvard commencement speech in 1989, she said that ''avaricious politicans'' had looted developing countries and left them without the means to tackle their social problems. Since she was ousted as Prime Minister during her second term, on Nov. 5, 1996, on charges that included gross corruption, she has been the leader of Pakistan's main opposition group, the Pakistan People's Party.

Some details of the allegations against Ms. Bhutto and Mr. Zardari appeared in European and American newspapers last fall, after Pakistani investigators began releasing some of the Bhutto family documents. But a much fuller picture emerged when several thick binders full of documents were made available to The New York Times over a period of several days in October. The Times's own investigation, lasting three months, extended from Pakistan to the Middle East, Europe and the United States, and included interviews with many of the central figures named by the Pakistani investigators.

Officials leading the inquiry in Pakistan say that the $100 million they have identified so far is only a small part of a windfall from corrupt activities. They maintain that an inquiry begun in Islamabad just after Ms. Bhutto's dismissal in 1996 found evidence that her family and associates generated more than $1.5 billion in illicit profits through kickbacks in virtually every sphere of government activity -- from rice deals, to the sell-off of state land, even rake-offs from state welfare schemes.

The Pakistani officials say their key break came last summer, when an informer offered to sell documents that appeared to have been taken from the Geneva office of Jens Schlegelmilch, whom Ms. Bhutto described as the family's attorney in Europe for more than 20 years, and as a close personal friend. Pakistani investigators have confirmed that the original asking price for the documents was $10 million. Eventually the seller traveled to London and concluded the deal for $1 million in cash.

The identity of the seller remains a mystery. Mr. Schlegelmilch, 55, developed his relationship with the Bhutto family through links between his Iranian-born wife and Ms. Bhutto's mother, who was also born in Iran. In a series of telephone interviews, he declined to say anything about Mr. Zardari and Ms. Bhutto, other than that he had not sold the documents. ''It wouldn't be worth selling out for $1 million,'' he said.


The documents included: statements for several accounts in Switzerland, including the Citibank accounts in Dubai and Geneva; letters from executives promising payoffs, with details of the percentage payments to be made; memorandums detailing meetings at which these ''commissions'' and ''remunerations'' were agreed on, and certificates incorporating the offshore companies used as fronts in the deals, many registered in the British Virgin Islands.

The documents also revealed the crucial role played by Western institutions. Apart from the companies that made payoffs, and the network of banks that handled the money -- which included Barclay's Bank and Union Bank of Switzerland as well as Citibank -- the arrangements made by the Bhutto family for their wealth relied on Western property companies, Western lawyers and a network of Western friends.

As striking as some of the payoff deals was the clinical way in which top Western executives concluded them. The documents showed painstaking negotiations over the payoffs, followed by secret contracts. In one case, involving Dassault, the contract specified elaborate arrangements intended to hide the proposed payoff for the fighter plane deal, and to prevent it from triggering French corruption laws.

Because Pakistan's efforts to uncover the deals have been handled in recent months by close aides of Prime Minister Sharif, who has alternated with Ms. Bhutto at the head of four civilian Governments in Pakistan since the end of military rule 10 years ago, the investigation has been deeply politicized. Last week, the Sharif aides forwarded 12 corruption cases cases against Ms. Bhutto, Mr. Zardari and Nusrat Bhutto, 68, to the country's ''accountability commission,'' headed by a retired judge, who has the power to approve formal indictments.

Apart from bolstering Mr. Sharif's power by exposing Ms. Bhutto, Mr. Sharif's aides hope to protect him against the possibility that she will one day return to office and turn the tables on him. Mr. Sharif, who is 48, battled for years during Ms. Bhutto's tenure to stay out of jail on a range of corruption charges, including allegations that he took millions of dollars in unsecured loans from state-owned banks for his family's steel empire, then defaulted.

The Heritage

Landowning Class Accustomed to Rule

The Bhuttos are among a few hundred so-called feudal families, mostly large landowners, that have dominated politics and business in Pakistan since its creation in 1947.

Ms. Bhutto's father was an Oxford-educated landowner who became Pakistan's Prime Minister in the 1970's, only to be ousted and jailed in 1977 when his military chief, Gen. Mohammed Zia ul-Haq, mounted a coup. Mr. Bhutto was hanged two years later, after he refused General Zia's offer of clemency for a murder conviction that many Pakistanis regarded as politically tainted.

ADVERTISEMENT

Continue reading the main story

Benazir Bhutto, the eldest of four children, spent the next decade under house arrest, in jail or in self-imposed exile, campaigning against General Zia's military regime.

In 1987 she married Mr. Zardari, little known then for anything but a passion for polo. It was an arranged union, with Ms. Bhutto's mother picking the groom. Many Pakistanis were startled by the social and financial differences. By the Bhuttos' standards, Mr. Zardari's family was of modest means, with limited holdings and a rundown movie theater in Karachi. Mr. Zardari's only experience of higher education was a stint at a commercial college in London.

In part the match was intended to protect Ms. Bhutto's political career by countering conservative Muslims' grumbling about her unmarried status. Barely eight months later, in 1988, General Zia was killed in a mysterious plane crash, which opened the way for Ms. Bhutto to win a narrow election victory.

Years later, many Pakistanis still speak of the mesmeric effect she had at that moment, as the daughter who had avenged her father and the politician who had restored democracy. But euphoria faded fast. Within months, newspapers were headlining allegations of dubious deals. In the bazaars, traders soon dubbed Mr. Zardari ''Mr. 10 Percent.''

Twenty months after she took office, Ms. Bhutto was dismissed by Pakistan's President on grounds of corruption and misrule. But the Sharif Government that succeeded Ms. Bhutto was unable to secure any convictions against her or her husband before Mr. Sharif, in turn, was ousted from office, also for corruption and misrule.

Mostly, Pakistanis gave Ms. Bhutto the benefit of the doubt after her first term, saying she might not have known what Mr. Zardari was doing. She was further aided by public suspicion of Mr. Sharif's motives. A taciturn man who got his start in politics as a protege of General Zia, Mr. Sharif has left little doubt of his chagrin at having been overshadowed by Ms. Bhutto.

Part of his discomfort stemmed from her success in fostering a favorable image for herself in the United States, as a staunch foe of Muslim fundamentalism, a relentless campaigner for the rights of the poor and -- a point she stressed in her Harvard speech in 1989 -- an opponent of leaders who use their power for personal gain, then ''leave the cupboard bare.''

When she took office as Prime Minister again, after a victory in 1993, Ms. Bhutto struck many of her friends as a changed person, obsessed with her dismissal in 1990, high-handed to the point of arrogance, and contemptuous of the liberal principles she had placed at the center of her politics in the 1980's. ''She no longer made the distinction between the Bhuttos and Pakistan,'' said Hussain Haqqani, Ms. Bhutto's former press secretary. ''In her mind, she was Pakistan, so she could do as she pleased.''

Ms. Bhutto's twin posts, as Prime Minister and Finance Minister, gave her virtually free rein. Mr. Zardari became her alter ego, riding roughshod over the bureaucracy although he had no formal economic powers until Ms. Bhutto appointed him Investment Minister, reporting only to herself, in July 1996. They maintained an imperial lifestyle in the new Prime Minister's residence in Islamabad, a $50 million mansion set on 110 acres on an Islamabad hilltop.

Within weeks of moving in, Mr. Zardari ordered 11.5 acres of protected woodland on an adjoining hilltop to be bulldozed for a polo field, an exercise track, stabling for 40 polo ponies, quarters for grooms and a parking lot for spectators. When a senior Government official, Mohammed Mehdi, objected to paying for the project with $1.3 million diverted from a budget for parks and other public amenities, Mr. Zardari ''categorically told me that he does not appreciate his orders to be examined and questioned by any authority,'' according to an affidavit filed with the Pakistani investigators by Mr. Mehdi. A few months later, with the work in progress, Mr. Zardari had Mr. Mehdi dismissed.

The investigators say that Mr. Zardari and associates he brought into the Government, some of them old school friends, began reviewing state programs for opportunities to make money. It was these broader activities, the investigators assert, more than the relatively small number of foreign deals revealed in the documents taken from the Swiss lawyer, that netted the largest sums for the Bhutto family.

Among the transactions Mr. Zardari exploited, according to these officials: defense contracts; power plant projects; the privatization of state-owned industries; the awarding of broadcast licenses; the granting of an export monopoly for the country's huge rice harvest; the purchase of planes for Pakistan International Airlines; the assignment of textile export quotas; the granting of oil and gas permits; authorizations to build sugar mills, and the sale of government lands.

The officials have said that Ms. Bhutto and Mr. Zardari took pains to avoid creating a documentary record of their role in hundreds of deals. How this was done was explained by Najam Sethi, a former Bhutto loyalist who became the editor of Pakistan's most popular political weekly, Friday Times, then was drafted to help oversee a corruption inquiry undertaken by the caretaker Government that ruled for three months after Ms. Bhutto's dismissal in 1996.

Mr. Sethi said Ms. Bhutto and Mr. Zardari adopted a system under which they assigned favors by writing orders on yellow Post-It notes and attaching them to official files. After the deals were completed, Mr. Sethi said, the notes were removed, destroying all trace of involvement.


When Mr. Sharif won a landslide election victory earlier this year, the corruption inquiry appeared, again, to fizzle. But a few days before the election, the caretakers hired Jules Kroll Associates, a New York investigative agency, to look for evidence of corruption abroad. The Kroll investigators put out feelers in Europe; Mr. Sharif's aides said it was one of these that produced the offer to sell the Bhutto family documents, and that they took over from Kroll Associates and completed the deal.

The Negotiations

Flight and Crash Of a Dassault Deal

Potentially the most lucrative deal uncovered by the documents involved the effort by Dassault Aviation, the French military contractor, to sell Pakistan 32 Mirage 2000-5 fighter planes. These were to replace two squadrons of American-made F-16's whose purchase was blocked when the Bush Administration determined in 1990 that Pakistan was covertly developing nuclear weapons.

In April 1995, Dassault found itself in arm's-length negotiations with Mr. Zardari and Amer Lodhi, a Paris-based lawyer and banker who had lived for years in the United States, working among other things as an executive of the now-defunct Bank of Commerce and Credit International. Mr. Lodhi's sister, Maleeha, a former Pakistan newspaper editor, became Ms. Bhutto's Ambassador to the United States in 1994.

Mr. Schlegelmilch, the Geneva lawyer, wrote a memo for his files describing his talks at Dassault's headquarters on the Champs-Elysees in Paris. According to the memo, the company's executives offered a ''remuneration'' of 5 percent to Marleton Business S.A., an offshore company controlled by Mr. Zardari. The memo indicated that in addition to Dassault, the payoff would be made by two companies involved in the manufacture of the Mirages: Snecma, an engine manufacturer, and Thomson-CSF, a maker of aviation electronics.

The documents offered intriguing insights into the anxieties that the deal aroused. In a letter faxed to Geneva, the Dassault executives -- Jean-Claude Carrayrou, Dassault's director of legal affairs, and Pierre Chouzenoux, the international sales manager -- wrote that ''for reasons of confidentiality,'' there would be only one copy of the contract guaranteeing the payoff. It would be kept at Dassault's Paris office, available to Mr. Schlegelmilch only during working hours.

The deal reached with Mr. Schlegelmilch reflected concerns about French corruption laws, which forbid bribery of French officials but permit payoffs to foreign officials, and even make the payoffs tax-deductible in France. The Swiss and the French have resisted American pressures to sign a worldwide treaty that would hold all businesses to the ethical standards of American law, which sets criminal penalties for bribing foreign officials.

''It is agreed that no part of the above-mentioned remuneration will be transferred to a French citizen, or to any company directly or indirectly controlled by French individuals or companies, or to any beneficiary of a resident or nonresident bank account in France,'' one of the Dassault documents reads.

ADVERTISEMENT

Continue reading the main story

Negotiations on the Mirage contract were within weeks of completion when Ms. Bhutto was dismissed by another Pakistani President in 1996. They have bogged down since, partly because Pakistan has run out of money to buy the planes, and partly because the Pakistan Army, still politically powerful a decade after the end of military rule, waited until Ms. Bhutto was removed to weigh in against the purchase.

A Dassault spokesman, Jean-Pierre Robillard, said Mr. Carrayrou, the legal affairs director, had retired. Two weeks after he was sent a summary of the documents, Mr. Robillard said that the company had decided to make no comment.

The Profits

Scams at Both Ends Of Customs System

One deal that appears to have made a handsome profit for Mr. Zardari involved Pakistan's effort to increase its customs revenues. Since fewer than one in every 100 Pakistanis pays income tax, customs revenues represent the state's largest revenue source. But for decades the system has been corrupted, with businesses underinvoicing imports, or paying bribes, to escape duties.

In the 1980's Pakistan came under pressure from the International Monetary Fund to increase government revenues and to cut a runaway budget deficit. During Ms. Bhutto's first term, Pakistan entrusted preshipment ''verification'' of all major imports to two Swiss companies with blue-ribbon reputations, Societe Generale de Surveillance S.A. and a subsidiary, Cotecna Inspection S.A. But the documents suggest that this stab at improving Pakistan's fiscal soundness was quickly turned to generating profits for the Bhutto family's accounts.

In 1994, executives of the two Swiss companies wrote promising to pay ''commissions'' totaling 9 percent to three offshore companies controlled by Mr. Zardari and Nusrat Bhutto. A Cotecna letter in June 1994 was direct: ''Should we receive, within six months of today, a contract for inspection and price verification of goods imported into Pakistan,'' it read, ''we will pay you 6 percent of the total amount invoiced and paid to the Government of Pakistan for such a contract and during the whole duration of that contract and its renewal.''

Similar letters, dated March and June 1994, were sent by Societe Generale de Surveillance promising ''consultancy fees'' of 6 percent and 3 percent to two other offshore companies controlled by the Bhutto family. According to Pakistani investigators, the two Swiss companies inspected more than $15.4 billion in imports into Pakistan from January 1995 to March 1997, making more than $131 million. The investigators estimated that the Bhutto family companies made $11.8 million from the deals, at least a third of which showed up in banking documents taken from the Swiss lawyer.

For Societe Generale de Surveillance, with 35,000 employees and more than $2 billion a year in earnings, the relationship with the Bhutto family has been painful. In addition to doing customs inspections, the company awards certificates of technical quality. In effect, its business is integrity.



In an interview in Geneva, Elisabeth Salina Amorini, president of Societe Generale, said the Pakistan contracts had been the subject of an internal company inquiry. But Ms. Salina Amorini, a 42-year-old lawyer, said the company had reorganized its government contracts division under a new executive and had sold Cotecna, acquired in 1994, back to the family that had previously owned it. The internal inquiry, she told reporters in Geneva last month, had shown ''a number of inadequacies which enabled certain irregularities to take place.''

Ms. Salina Amorini said in the interview that a study of Societe Generale's dealings with Pakistan had uncovered a $650 million shortfall in customs revenues that the Bhutto Government was supposed to have collected over a 21-month period in 1995 and 1996. She said the company had reported the shortfall to Washington-based officials of the monetary fund and the World Bank, which monitor customs revenues to check Pakistan's compliance with conditions set for emergency loans. The conditions are meant to help the country avoid default on its foreign debt.

Officials at the two financial institutions are investigating the Swiss company's report to determine whether the customs system was corrupted at both ends -- from commissions paid to Bhutto family companies on the preshipment inspection contracts and, later, in illicit payments by Pakistani importers seeking to avoid the customs duties that the Swiss companies had determined they owed.

The Gold Connection

Granting a License, Reaping a Profit

Pakistan's Arabian Sea coast, stretching from Karachi to the border with Iran, has long been a gold smugglers' haven. Until the beginning of Ms. Bhutto's second term, the trade, running into hundreds of millions of dollars a year, was unregulated, with slivers of gold called biscuits, and larger weights in bullion, carried on planes and boats that travel between the Persian Gulf and the largely unguarded Pakistani coast.

Shortly after Ms. Bhutto returned as Prime Minister in 1993, a Pakistani bullion trader in Dubai, Abdul Razzak Yaqub, proposed a deal: in return for a license to import gold, Mr. Razzak would help the Government regularize the trade.

In January 1994, weeks after Ms. Bhutto began her second term, Mr. Schlegelmilch established a British Virgin Island company known as Capricorn Trading, S.A., with Mr. Zardari as its principal owner. Nine months later, on Oct. 5, 1994, an account was opened at the Dubai offices of Citibank in the name of Capricorn Trading. The same day, a Citibank deposit slip for the account shows a deposit of $5 million by Mr. Razzak's company, ARY Traders. Two weeks later, another Citibank deposit slip showed that ARY had paid a further $5 million.

In November 1994, Pakistan's Commerce Ministry wrote to Mr. Razzak informing him that he had been granted a license that made him, for at least the next two years, Pakistan's sole authorized gold importer. In an interview in his office in Dubai, Mr. Razzak acknowedged that he had used the license to import more than $500 million in gold into Pakistan, and that he had traveled to Islamabad several times to meet with Ms. Bhutto and Mr. Zardari. But he denied that there had been any secret deal. ''I have not paid a single cent to Zardari,'' he said.



Mr. Razzak offered an unusual explanation for the Citibank documents that showed his company paying the $10 million to Mr. Zardari, suggesting that someone in Pakistan who wished to destroy his reputation had contrived to have his company wrongly identified as the depositor of the money. ''Somebody in the bank has cooperated with my enemies to make false documents,'' he said.

The Documentation

Erasing the Proofs Of Secret Power

The Pakistani investigation of Ms. Bhutto's two terms in office has tied a range of overseas properties to her husband and other family members. Among these are Rockwood, a 355-acre estate south of London, and a $2.5 million country manor in Normandy. The listed owners of the manor, which is known as the House of the White Queen, are Hakim and Zarrin Zardari.

Other properties that Pakistani investigators have linked to members of the Bhutto family include a string of luxury apartments in London. Pakistan has asked the United States Justice Department to investigate still more bank accounts and properties, including a country club and a polo ranch in Palm Beach County, Florida, said to be worth about $4 million, that were bought by associates of Mr. Zardari in the mid-1990's.

The Pakistani request to Washington, made in December, also sought help in checking allegations that some of Mr. Zardari's wealth may have come from Pakistani drug traffickers paying for protection. In the past decade, Pakistan and its neighbor Afghanistan have become the world's largest source of heroin, shipping 250 tons of it every year to Europe and the United States.

The purchase of overseas properties by well-connected members of the elite in a developing country is hardly a new phenomenon. But the disclosures about Ms. Bhutto's family have underscored a trend that international financial officials have long found troubling: the willingness of the monetary fund and the World Bank to prop up economies like Pakistan's that have been bled dry by corruption.

A former high-ranking official of the World Bank in Islamabad who requested anonymity acknowledged that both institutions were all too willing to make additional loans on the vague promise that corruption would be reined in. ''We made a mantra out of the phrase 'good governance,' '' the official said, ''as though we intended to try and stamp the corruption out. But the truth is that we turned a blind eye.''

In the years Ms. Bhutto was in office, Pakistan received billions of dollars in new loans, mostly to enable it to pay interest on its debt. By 1996, interest on the accumulated public debt, including $32 billion in foreign loans, was absorbing nearly 70 percent of state revenues. With Pakistan's defense costs absorbing the remaining 30 percent, scarcely anything was left for the social programs that Ms. Bhutto had promised.


While the Times inquiry confirmed some of the allegations made by the Pakistani investigators, other matters remained unresolved. For example, none of the documents for the foreign bank accounts or offshore companies uncovered thus far bear Ms. Bhutto's name, nor do any of the letters promising payoffs make any mention of her.

The only document that refers to Ms. Bhutto is a handwritten ledger for an account at the Union Bank of Switzerland in Geneva. In Mr. Schlegelmilch's handwriting, the ledger contains the notation ''50% AAZ 50 % BB.'' This account showed deposits of $1.8 million for one 90-day period in 1994 and received at least $860,000 in payments by the two Swiss customs-inspection companies.

Some of Ms. Bhutto's friends say she cannot fairly be held accountable for her husband's questionable deals, since she was too busy as Prime Minister to know of them. Others say Ms. Bhutto, having lost her father and both of her brothers in tragic circumstances, became overdependent emotionally on Mr. Zardari.

Her younger brother, Shahnawaz, died of poisoning in Cannes, France, in 1985 after a dispute that Murtaza Bhutto, her older brother, linked to arguments over family assets stashed in Switzerland. Murtaza Bhutto was killed in September 1986 after a long-running power struggle with his sister and her husband. Mr. Zardari has been charged with masterminding the second murder, but he and Ms. Bhutto say he was framed.

Officials say Mr. Zardari made no attempt to disguise his activities from his wife, holding meetings on some of his deals in the Prime Minister's residence, and invoking his wife's authority when ordering officials to override regulations meant to prevent graft in the assignment of contracts.

Furthermore, several senior officials in Ms. Bhutto's Governments said they had met with repeated rebuffs when they tried to warn her about Mr. Zardari. One senior minister said that when he had raised the issue, ''She said, 'How dare you talk to me like that?' and stalked out.''

Nor has Ms. Bhutto made any effort to distance herself from Mr. Zardari. In the Karachi interview, she said her husband's deals had been made only for Pakistan's benefit. ''He's a very generous person,'' she said. ''His weakness, and his strength, is that he's always trying to help people.''


The tax returns filed by Ms. Bhutto and her husband in her years in office give no hint of the wealth uncovered by the Pakistani inquiry. Ms. Bhutto, Mr. Zardari and Nusrat Bhutto declared assets totaling $1.2 million in 1996 and never told authorities of any foreign accounts or properties, as required by law. Mr. Zardari declared no net assets at all in 1990, the year Ms. Bhutto's first term ended, and only $402,000 in 1996.

The family's income tax declarations were similarly modest. The highest income Ms. Bhutto declared was $42,200 in 1996, with $5,110 in tax. In two of her years as Prime Minister, 1993 and 1994, she paid no income tax at all. Mr. Zardari's highest declared income was $13,100, also in 1996, when interest on bank deposits he controlled in Switzerland exceeded that much every week.

Pakistan's inquiry is in its early phases, but it has already prompted international action. Swiss officials have frozen 17 bank accounts belonging to the Bhutto family, and authorities in Britain and France are searching for other accounts and properties.

Ms. Bhutto described the investigation as a persecution. At one point she attacked the Clinton Administration, saying it had ignored her plight while deploring the treatment of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, the Burmese opposition leader and Nobel laureate.

''This is the most horrendous human rights record, what is happening to me, the former Prime Minister of Pakistan,'' Ms. Bhutto said. ''It is shocking to see that the Clinton Administration talks so much about Burma, when this is happening to a woman who leads the opposition here.'' Tears welling in her eyes, she added, ''The Bhuttos have suffered so much for Pakistan.''

https://www.nytimes.com/1998/01/09/...-special-report-bhutto-clan-leaves-trail.html


Keep in mind this is uptil 1998 and only covers BB's 2 tenures as PM. What happened post her assassination is beyond comparison.
 
Where is this clown the joker what has he done since taking over the office as FM, what is his stance on Kashmr, US if any...
 
Where is this clown the joker what has he done since taking over the office as FM, what is his stance on Kashmr, US if any...

The army is doing his job. ISI chief is visiting the US before him
 
Where is this clown the joker what has he done since taking over the office as FM, what is his stance on Kashmr, US if any...

Other than taking dictation from his Umreeki overlords nothing....

Jab khat aata hai to sazish hota hai....
 
Security of Chinese tops agenda of Bilawal Bhutto's first meeting with Wang Yi

Pakistan, China vow to quash conspiracies aimed at destroying ties.
FM Bilawal promises bringing perpetrators of KU attack to justice.
China highlights targeted measures to prevent such incidents in future.
Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari on Wednesday discussed the security of Chinese citizens and institutions in Pakistan, in a virtual meeting with his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi.

A statement issued by the Foreign Office stated that Yi, who is also the Chinese State Councilor, felicitated Bilawal on the assumption of office as FM.

FM Bilawal expressed on behalf of Pakistan the resolve to bring the perpetrators of the attack on Chinese nationals to justice and ensure the security of Chinese citizens in Pakistan.

He condemned the attack that killed three Chinese teachers of Confucius Institute at Karachi University and reiterated that Pakistan attached high importance to th esafety and security of Chinese projects, nationals and institutions in Pakistan.

"The terrorists' target is the friendship between the two countries but the Pakistani government will not let them get what they want. Pakistan's intelligence and law enforcement agencies have been working around the clock to catch the criminals and to prevent similar incidents from happening again," Global Times quoted Bilawal as saying.

In response, Wang underscored China's will to work with Pakistan to suppress all plots and conspiracies intended to affect the friendly ties between the two countries. He conveyed that China fully appreciated the condemnation and solidarity expressed by President Arif Alvi, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and other politicians.

Wang also urged that both the countries should take immediate and effective action against the recent terrorist attacks on Chinese nationals on Pakistani soil.

He highlighted targeted measures to prevent such incidents in future and suggested setting up a rapid security alarm and closing loopholes in security protection.

Besides detailed discussion on security, the two countries discussed bilateral, regional and global issues of mutual interest as well.

The FO said Bilawal conveyed that Pakistan enjoyed unique and time-tested bonds with China and appreciated the measures taken by the two sides to strengthen the All-Weather Strategic Cooperative Partnership between the two countries.

He thanked his counterpart for China’s firm support to Pakistan’s sovereignty, territorial integrity, independence and national development, and reaffirmed Pakistan’s full support to China on all issues of its core interest.

The foreign minister underscored his determination to inject fresh momentum in the bilateral strategic cooperative partnership and add new avenues to practical cooperation. He appreciated the transformational impact of the China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) on Pakistan’s infrastructure, energy, industrialisation, socio-economic development and improvement in the livelihoods of the people.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/416438-fm...sure-security-of-chinese-citizens-in-pakistan
 
ISLAMABAD: Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari Thursday revealed a PTI minister had threatened him with the imposition of martial law a night before the no-confidence motion against ex-prime minister Imran Khan was passed.

In his address to the National Assembly, Bilawal told the house that the PTI minister asked him to either accept early elections or martial law would be imposed in the country.

The foreign minister said that despite PTI's repeated attempts to defeat the no-confidence motion against the former premier, their bids were foiled and the no-trust vote was successful.

Bilawal then demanded an investigation into the events leading up to and post the no-confidence motion that led to former prime minister Imran Khan's ouster.

Ex-deputy speaker Qasim Suri had termed the no-trust motion against Khan "unconstitutional" and dismissed it on April 3, and following this, the then-prime minister advised President Arif Alvi to dissolve the assemblies and he followed suit.

But the then-Opposition filed a plea in the Supreme Court seeking the nullification of the government's move. The top court then on April 7, declared the government's decision to dissolve the assembly and Suri's ruling against the constitution.

The SC had asked to hold the voting on the no-confidence motion on April 9, but Khan had the speaker prolong the session. But near midnight, the speaker resigned from office.

Being the senior member of the panel of chairs, PML-N MNA Ayaz Sadiq chaired a session on early April 10 and held the voting no-confidence motion which ultimately led to Khan's ouster.

"This house must form a high-level parliamentary commission or committee to investigate the events leading up to April 3, post-April 3, of the night of April 9 and 10, and the events that have taken place to date after [the no-confidence motion was successful]," Bilawal said on the floor of the National Assembly.

The PPP chairman said the "attacks on the constitution and the house" should be taken seriously, and an investigation should be held to determine who was at fault.

"Even the Supreme Court termed the previous government's acts of April 3 as unconstitutional [...] in the manner that the former government to escape from challenge of no-confidence, it was unconstitutional and the people of Pakistan demand accountability," he added.

Bilawal said the acts of undermining the constitution had taken place in the past as well and the parliament remained mum on it, therefore, these events should be investigated.

Bilawal emphasised that PPP was never in the favour of political engineering and noted that his party's demand still stands that first electoral reforms should take place, and general elections should be held after them.

"We are a democratic force and demand transparent elections. We had earlier demanded that electoral reforms should take place first. This is PPP's clear stance," Bilawal said.

'Situation in Pakistan is at crisis point'
Berating Khan, he said the former prime minister should be asked about his performance during his tenure, he should be questioned about the economy, and how his "ego" damaged Pakistan internationally, in a reference to the PTI chairman's alleged US threat.

"The former prime minister thinks he is a 'sacred cow' as he is currently speaking against the constitution, national security, and economic stability," the foreign minister said.

The PPP chairman said the government left a mess in terms of the economy as it has left sugar, wheat, and energy crises for the incumbent government.

"Wherever we see, there is a crisis [...] the conditions are even worst than we had thought when we were in the Opposition. The situation in Pakistan is at a crisis point — there should be no difference of opinion in this regard," Bilawal said.

Resolution passed condemning Indian actions in IOJK
In other matters of business, the National Assembly unanimously passed a resolution denouncing the latest Indian attempt for demographic engineering in occupied Jammu and Kashmir through a so-called "delimitation commission".

The foreign minister had moved the resolution, which stated that India aims to artificially alter the electoral strength of the Muslim majority in occupied Kashmir.

Noting that the commission’s recommendations have been rejected by a cross-section of political parties in the occupied region, the resolution categorically rejected the report of the so-called delimitation commission that seeks to convert the Muslim majority territory into minority and further marginalise, disenfranchise, and disempower the Kashmiri population and advance the political and electoral objectives of the BJP.

The resolution noted that through the delimitation exercise, India is making attempts to further its illegal actions of 5th August 2019 and subsequent measures.


The resolution recalled that Jammu and Kashmir is an internationally recognised dispute and a long-standing item on the agenda of the UN Security Council.

It declared that no façade of elections based on a sham delimitation exercise can substitute the legitimacy and indispensability of a free and impartial plebiscite under the auspices of the UN.

The resolution demanded that India should honour and fulfil its obligations under international law, UNSC resolutions, and the fourth Geneva Convention, whilst refraining from bringing about any illegal demographic changes in the occupied territory.

It urged the Indian government to forthwith end its oppression and widespread violations of human rights and international humanitarian law in IIOJK and enable the Kashmiri people to exercise their inalienable right to self-determination as enshrined in the Security Council resolutions.

The resolution called upon the international community to ensure accountability for India’s grave and persistent violations of human rights and war crimes in IOJK.

The resolution reiterated Pakistan’s unflinching commitment and solidarity with Kashmiri, reaffirming that Pakistan will continue to extend all possible support in their just struggle for freedom and self-determination.

It also asked the government to continue to expose and counter the Indian moves before the international community and to highlight and forcefully project the Kashmir cause at all bilateral and multilateral forums including the UN and the OIC.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/416461-pe...ation-into-events-surrounding-no-trust-motion
 
Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari warned on Thursday that the next elections could be bloody if all political parties failed to reach a consensus on a basic code of conduct for polls in light of the increasing polarisation and divide in the county.

Bilawal, who is also the chairman of the Pakistan Peoples Party, said on the floor of the National Assembly that no one was ready to follow the rules of the game. "What would be left if there will be no trust in democracy and democratic processes," he asked.

He reiterated that the political parties should formulate a basic code of conduct so that the country could be run and elections may be held peacefully.

Bilawal clarified that the PPP’s policy was clear as it first wanted reforms and then elections.

Among other things, the PPP chairman also revealed that he was threatened a night before the vote of no confidence to agree to fresh


Express Tribune
 
Oh no - did he realize he praised the previous Government here?

==

Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari said on Thursday that Pakistan’s response to the Covid-19 pandemic was firmly grounded in scientific evidence and logic.

Mr Bhutto-Zardari voiced this praise at a global summit on the pandemic, co-hosted by the White House.

“Health security, especially in times of pandemic, is indivisible. Microorganisms do not reco*gnize nation-states. For them, we are all the same. To counter them, we must act as one.”

“Any approach to deal with a health crisis must be grounded firmly in scientific evidence and logic,” he said, adding “responses, monitoring and evaluation should be guided by established methods of epidemiology and community medicine.” Pakistan’s response to the pandemic was “firmly embedded in these principles. We prioritised vaccinations, boosters, and adequate infection prevention measures,” he added.

Acknowledging the support Pakistan received from a number of countries and international organizations, the foreign minister noted that “the US was immensely generous in providing 62 million vaccines to Pakistan.” And, of course, “China, from the outset, supported us tremendously,” he added while underlining Islamabad’s need to maintain a balanced relationship with the two major world powers.

Pakistan, too, provided Covid-related assistance to countries that needed it, he said,

Mr. Bhutto-Zardari pointed out that the pandemic was a sombre time for human civilisation — “a period to reflect what truly mattered for homo sapiens.”

He urged the international community to discuss and develop short and long-term solutions to this, as well as future health crises.

Published in Dawn, May 13th, 2022
 
Last edited:
Foreign Minister and Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) Chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari has arrived in Karachi — his first visit to the port city after assuming the high-profile portfolio – on Sunday where he will address a rally shortly.

A large number of party workers and supporters flocked to Jinnah International Airport to welcome the youngest foreign minister in the country's history.

The party workers decorated Old Terminal of Karachi airport — the venue for Bilawal's rally.

According to media reports, PPP established reception camps at a number of places in the city to welcome Bilawal.

Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah, while inspecting the arrangements, said that a large number of people are expected to welcome the foreign minister.

At a time when there are multiple challenges being faced on the external front, the country was bestowed with the youngest foreign minister, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, who finally took oath as a federal minister for the first time in April.

The 33-year-old followed in the footsteps of his grandfather, Zulifkar Ali Bhutto, who became the foreign minister at the age of 35. Bilawal was elected member of the National Assembly for the first time in 2018 but this is his first job as a cabinet member.

Bilawal will visit the United States on Tuesday to lead Pakistan's delegation at a ministerial-level meeting on global food security in New York on Wednesday.

The meeting, convened by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, is aimed at responding to the escalating food prices across the world in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

According to diplomatic sources, the meeting will review the urgent humanitarian needs and identify steps to build resilience for the future.

The ministerial meeting will be followed by a UN Security Council debate on "Conflict and Food Security" the following day.

During his visit, Foreign Minister Bilawal will also hold meetings with UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, President of UN General Assembly Abdullah Shahid and some bilateral meetings with his counterparts.

Express Tribune
 
KARACHI: Firing a broadside at PTI Chairman Imran Khan, Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari alleged that the former prime minister “wanted every institution to turn into his tiger force”.

Addressing a crowd on his arrival to Karachi for the first time since joining Shehbaz Sharif’s cabinet, the PPP chairman congratulated his supporters — referred to as jiyalas — for their victory in removing the PTI government from power.

“Democracy has won, all four provinces have won. We have sent the selected, puppet and incompetent prime minister home,” said Bilawal.

The PPP chairman, who is the foreign minister in Shehbaz Sharif’s cabinet, said that his jiyalas are “always successful” when they come out for the protection of the Constitution and take on the dictator of the time. He added that his supporters started their movement when Imran Khan came to power.

“We were standing against this undemocratic person since day one. We looked into his eyes and said you were not elected but selected. We faced injustice but did not sell our principles,” said Bilawal.

The PPP chairman went on to say that when he began his long march, he asked Khan to dissolve the assembly but he was under the influence of power and did not listen to the then Opposition.

Bilawal said that the then Opposition submitted the no-confidence motion against Khan when his caravan reached Islamabad.

“We used democratic means to send an undemocratic person home,” said Bilawal and added that the PTI chairman’s government was removed as part of the democratic process compared to what he claimed was a foreign conspiracy.

The foreign minister said that Khan's removal from power was not a foreign conspiracy but a win for political workers, adding that Khan’s ouster was a victory of the Parliament, the Constitution, and democracy.

“White House did not conspire against you but the Bilawal House did,” said the PPP chairman while referring to his residence.

Bilawal said that members of the current government “forgot” their “political differences and formed” the Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM). He said that the PPP convinced the allied parties not to leave the Parliament and send Khan home via the no-confidence motion.

Continuing his tirade against Khan, Bilawal said that the former government stole people’s jobs and instead of ending corruption, it broke all records of corruption.

“Imran wanted every institution to turn into his tiger force. Imran wanted the establishment to turn into a tiger force and support him,” claimed Bilawal, adding that the PTI chairman caused harm to the country as he was leaving.

“The coward would not even come and stand in the Parliament. Khan attacked the Constitution while running away from the no-confidence motion,” said Bilawal, adding that the PTI chairman is running a
"why was I not saved movement".

“What kind of a prime minister was he as he ruined the economy during his tenure. He emptied the treasury and left an economic crisis to torture people,” said Bilawal.

The foreign minister also said that the former premier “isolated the country for the sake of his ego” and harmed Pakistan’s foreign policy.

GEO
 
Where is this joker when Country is on brink of default should have had bent down and begged on all fours for some soft loan all around the world from Korea to China to Japan to Istanbul to Mozambique to Chad to Liberia to Indonesia to IMF
 
Ex-ambassador Nadeem Riaz penalised for sexual harassment

ISLAMABAD: The federal ombudsman secretariat for protection against harassment has imposed the major penalty of dismissal from service on a former ambassador of Pakistan to Italy for sexually harassing a female trade officer in Rome.

The ombudsman on Saturday imposed the penalty on Nadeem Riaz on the complaint of the trade officer, Saira Imdad Ali.

She complained that the ambassador had sexually harassed her time and again through different tactics and manners and made the working condition for her so hostile that she was compelled to return to Pakistan.

An official source said the case was filed with the ombudsman office in 2018 while the ambassador retired from service last year.

The order issued by the ombudsman dated May 14, 2022, stated: “After threadbare security and analysis of the case and after completing the due process of law, accused Nadeem Riaz, head of mission embassy of Pakistan Rome Italy was proceeded against and imposed upon major penalty of dismissal from service under section 4(4) of the Act 2010.”

Similarly, accused is also imposed upon a fine of Rs5 million to be paid to the complaint as a compensation and cost of litigation. The order be sent to Ministry of Foreign Affairs for implementation in letter and spirit within seven days under intimation to the registrar office of this forum,” read the decision.

In her complaint, the trade officer said since her posting to Rome, she had been “dealt with highly disrespectable, hostile and humiliating manner by respondent No I [ambassador].” She said the ambassador directed her to travel along with him to places unrelated to her job and in addition to that she was also directed to arrange her residence near that of the ambassador.

The complainant said the ambassador also got electricity supply to her house in Rome disconnected through the company concerned.

She said the ambassador insulted her without any valid reason during the visit of a delegation from the Lahore Chamber of Commerce and Industry to Italy. The complainant said she reported the incident to the Ministry of Commerce but without any fruitful result.

She stated that the ambassador made her to work without authorised translator from January 2018 till June 30, 2018.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1689844/ex-ambassador-nadeem-riaz-penalised-for-sexual-harassment
 
Islamabad: Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari on Tuesday met with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken to mend broken ties between the two countries, ARY News reported.

PPP Chairman Bilawal Bhutto participated in a ministerial meeting and debate at the United Nations Security Council on food security.

According to ARY News, Bilawal and Blinken vowed to mend ties between Pakistan and America and strengthen bilateral bonds. The American Secretary of State said that the USA is looking forward to encouraging economic and trade ties with Pakistan.

Unmute
Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari emphasised the importance of multilateralism and the United Nations in Pakistan’s foreign policy.

Antony Blinken also thank the Pakistan Foreign Minister for his participation in the Food security debate at the UN. Bilawal Bhutto assured Blinken that US investors in Pakistan will be provided with maximum assistance.

Pakistan adheres to UN Charter principles. Pakistan has always supported the solution of global problems in accordance with the principles, Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari said.

The Foreign Minister is scheduled to meet with a German and Italian delegation too.

Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Hina Rabbani Khar said, “The Global Food Security Summit is important to us as we are counted among the countries undergoing food shortages. The foreign minister will present Pakistan’s position in these important meetings.”

She added that they will use every platform in a positive and powerful way. They will point out that Pakistan never wants to be part of the conflict. Human rights abuses in occupied Jammu and Kashmir will be effectively highlighted. “We will take care of Pakistan’s interests,” she said.

ARY
 
Islamabad: Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari on Tuesday met with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken to mend broken ties between the two countries, ARY News reported.

PPP Chairman Bilawal Bhutto participated in a ministerial meeting and debate at the United Nations Security Council on food security.

According to ARY News, Bilawal and Blinken vowed to mend ties between Pakistan and America and strengthen bilateral bonds. The American Secretary of State said that the USA is looking forward to encouraging economic and trade ties with Pakistan.

Unmute
Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari emphasised the importance of multilateralism and the United Nations in Pakistan’s foreign policy.

Antony Blinken also thank the Pakistan Foreign Minister for his participation in the Food security debate at the UN. Bilawal Bhutto assured Blinken that US investors in Pakistan will be provided with maximum assistance.

Pakistan adheres to UN Charter principles. Pakistan has always supported the solution of global problems in accordance with the principles, Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari said.

The Foreign Minister is scheduled to meet with a German and Italian delegation too.

Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Hina Rabbani Khar said, “The Global Food Security Summit is important to us as we are counted among the countries undergoing food shortages. The foreign minister will present Pakistan’s position in these important meetings.”

She added that they will use every platform in a positive and powerful way. They will point out that Pakistan never wants to be part of the conflict. Human rights abuses in occupied Jammu and Kashmir will be effectively highlighted. “We will take care of Pakistan’s interests,” she said.

ARY

What is this joker doing cavorting the world while the country burns.
Idiots have 1 vote majority at the moment with 14 parties cobbled together.
 
Subservient Billo standing under his master's flag, hands obediently folded shifty eyes.

He did not take any questions and quickly made a run for the door.

billo.JPG
 
[MENTION=135038]Major[/MENTION] look at your nervous joker. looks like he is going to soil his pants any moment.
It should have been better to make Hina Rabbani Khar the Fm. She atleast had some experience on the International stage.

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/cX70J9mBEbo" title="YouTube video player" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
WASHINGTON: Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari has said that Islamabad is looking to the Taliban regime in Afghanistan to play its role in discouraging the increase in terrorist activity on Pakistan’s side of the border.

“We continue to not only monitor this situation, but work on our side to ensure that we can try to tackle the threat of terrorism and hope that the regime in Afghanistan lives up to their international commitment to not allow their soil to be used for terrorism,” the foreign minister said in an interview with CNN’s Christiane Amanpour when asked how he sees the Afghan Taliban government, after reports emerged that Kabul had brokered a ceasefire between the Pakistani military and banned Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan.

When asked what it will take for Pakistan to accept the current administration in Kabul, Mr Bhutto-Zardari said any decision in this regard will be taken in line with the discussions with the international community. At the same time, he added, “we continue to advocate for engagement, particularly in light of the humanitarian crisis developing in Afghanistan”.

When asked if Islamabad had engaged with the Afghan Taliban on how Muslim countries can give rights to women, the minister said it wasn’t an issue of the West. “I see women’s rights or women’s rights to education as rights granted to us in Islam. We’ll be emphasising that the Taliban keep their international commitments and ensure rights to the women of Afghanistan.”

To Ms Amanpour’s comment that the US believed Pakistan had played a “very dangerous role” in supporting the Afghan Taliban over the decades, Bilawal maintained Pakistan has consistently engaged with Afghanistan regardless of who was in power. “We have always been advocates of the fact that alongside action against terrorist activity, the resolution of the dispute was in dialogue and diplomacy and ultimately, despite Pakistan being at the receiving end of criticism for maintaining and sustaining this position, the international community went down that route while resolving the conflict and issues in Afghanistan.”

He added that the developments in Kabul have had a direct impact on the lives of the people of Pakistan. “We must prioritise, alleviate the humanitarian crisis, ensure there’s no economic collapse and hold the Taliban regime to the international commitments. It was not Pakistan, but the US who had direct communication with the Taliban regime before their takeover of Kabul. Pakistan and international community believe it will not serve any of our interests if we abandon the people of Afghanistan once again.”

https://www.dawn.com/news/1690391/islamabad-looking-to-kabul-to-help-check-terror-says-bilawal
 
Back
Top