Kashmir Observer

Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, Hanged To Death, Didn't Get Fair Trial: Pak Supreme Court

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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan's Supreme Court ruled on Wednesday that former Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, who was hanged 44 years ago after being convicted of murder, didn't get a fair trial.

Bhutto, the founder of the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) now run by his grandson and former foreign minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, was hanged in 1979 after a trial under the military regime of late General Zia-ul-Haq.

"We didn't find that the fair trial and due process requiremen­ts were met," said Chief Justice Qazi Faez Isa in remarks telecast live of the ruling that he said was a unanimous decision by a nine-member bench headed by him.

The ruling came in response to a judicial reference filed by Bhutto Zardari's father, Asif Ali Zardari, during his tenure as president in 2011. It sought an opinion by the top court on revisiting the deat h sentence awarded to the PPP founder.

"Our family waited 3 generation­s to hear these words," Bhutto Zardari said later in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter.

The court will issue a detailed order later.

"It is an admission of a colossal miscarriag­e of justice under Zia's martial law regime," said Yousuf Nazar, London-based political commentato­r and a close aide of the late prime minister.

Rights groups say Haq's 11 years of dictatorsh­ip were marked by an assault on democracy, persecutio­n and jailing of PPP workers and public flogging of opponents and critics.

Nazar said the regime also pushed the conservati­ve Muslim nation into extremism and militancy by propping up and backing militant groups to fight a U.S. proxy war against the then-Soviet Union in Afghanista­n.

"It led to an unpreceden­ted level of support for and patronage of religious extremists at the state level," he said.

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