'What is the evidence against me?' Musharraf asks Bilawal in response to murder accusation
Former president Pervez Musharraf has once again pointed the finger at PPP co-chairman Asif Ali Zardari as Benazir Bhutto's killer, arguing that the latter had the most to gain from her death.
In a video response to Bilawal Bhutto's chants of "Musharraf qatil" at Benazir's death anniversary commemoration at Gari Khuda Bux on Dec 27, Musharraf took the misogynistic route to begin his argument, saying, "I would like to say to Bilawal, who is raising these slogans like a woman, that he should first become a man."
"The other thing I would like to say to him is that saying these things like a child will lead to nowhere, what is the evidence for it [your accusation]?" he asked.
"The one who benefited the most (from Benazir's death) is their father, sitting in their own house, who terrifies them and forces them into raising these slogans against me," Musharraf said, before beginning another tirade about how, in his view, the evidence in the case all points to Zardari as Benazir's killer.
"What evidence is there against me? You only keep saying that I did not provide any security (to Benazir), How can you say that? I say that the government provided 100 per cent security to her and it was not even my job."
"There was full security, Benazir came to Liaquat Bagh for two hours and then she passed through the crowd to sit in her bomb-proof car, which we had provided. How is it that not even a hair was out of place in the case of the other five people in the car?"
"He [Zardari] got a fake will written and took over the party. He also became owner of Benazir's property. He has become so rich (because of Benazir's death)."
"Now if we examine the evidence, lets talk about the bomb-proof car that they were provided. Whose idea was it to cut a hatch on the top of a bomb-proof car?" he asked.
"More importantly, whose idea was it to call Benazir three times and ask her to raise herself out of the hatch and wave to the crowd?"
"Then, who mysteriously took away the phone that Benazir was called on — how did that phone mysteriously disappear for a year and a half?"
"And now think about the fact that their interior minister, Rehman Malik, who was their [Benazir's] security in-charge, fled the scene. How could he disappear when his duty was with Benazir?" Musharraf asked, continuing his series of questions.
"And then that other guy, his [Zardari's] jail-mate, Khalid Shehenshah, who got him murdered?" he asked, recalling that, even more mysteriously, the murderer himself was also killed under mysterious circumstances.
Wrapping up his series of questions, Musharraf said, "All this evidence points to the same person. It is not enough to just say that I am the killer — they need to provide evidence against me as well."
"If I would have done nothing and just sat there, it would have been okay since these external powers — the superpower, America — did not want me to leave," Musharraf claimed.
"They wanted me to remain the president. So [the killing] would not have affected me in any way, because I had an agreement with Benazir."
According to Musharraf, the reason for Bilawal's allegations is to put him down, as well as to put the army down, indirectly.
"There is one thing in all of this that makes me happy: it is that these people are now afraid of me; they are worried I may become too popular," Musharraf said.
"I will come to Pakistan at a suitable time soon and I will face their cases too."
In an interview given to BBC recently, Musharraf had said that during his reign, there may have been elements within the establishment who conspired with the Taliban to murder former prime minister Benazir Bhutto. He had added that this was a hunch, but that he was confident of his assessment.