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Bhutto’s son vows defeat for jihad

The son of slain former Pakistan premier Benazir Bhutto has launched his formal political debut in a massive rally, vowing to resist extremism and stop the Islamic State group from gaining a foothold in the country.

Tens of thousands of people gathered to hear Bilawal Bhutto Zardari amid ultra-tight security measures in the Pakistan’s largest city Karachi, where crowds of supporters sang and danced, waving the flag of Bhutto’s main opposition Pakistan People’s Party (PPP).

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Bilawal, 26, is being groomed to lead the party by his father Asif Ali Zardari, who was Pakistan’s president from 2008 until last year.

In a speech that lasted around two hours, delivered in Urdu, the young leader condemned the homegrown Pakistani Taliban and other jihadi groups including the Islamic State, which controls large swathes of Iraq and Syria.

He expressed fears his country could breed its own extremists hellbent on sectarian war, telling the crowd: “One fine day another Osama bin Laden would emerge … and some puppet would announce the opening of a Taliban office in Peshawar, which would ultimately become an Islamic State office.

“Civil war would begin all across the country in the name of religion.”

In typically confrontational style, he vowed to finish extremists and continue the rule of his family dynasty in Pakistan.

“Enemies of Pakistan you would be defeated … only Bhuttoism would prevail here,” he said.

Bilawal further blamed the country’s current political crisis on “domestic and foreign forces” collaborating in a plot to push Pakistan into chaos, taking a swipe at his populist opponents.

Rallies calling for the resignation of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif led by cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan had paralysed parts of Pakistan’s capital, while security forces battle militants in a restive northwestern tribal area who routinely launch attacks on NATO forces in Afghanistan.

Bilawal vowed to carry on the legacy of his assassinated mother and revival of the party which shrank to its home province in the last elections.

“Bhuttoism is the name of Jihad against extremism, poverty, and destitution,” said the young leader, who was schooled in Dubai and at Oxford University and has a marked accent when speaking in Urdu, as English is his first language.

The rally marked the seventh anniversary of the devastating bomb attack that hit Benazir Bhutto’s homecoming parade in Karachi on October 18, 2007, killing 139 people in the deadliest single terror attack on Pakistani soil.

Bilawal arrived at the rally by helicopter and addressed the crowds from the same bullet and bomb-proof truck that his mother used for the ill-fated parade, which was meant to mark her triumphant return after nearly a decade of self-imposed exile.

She survived the bombing, but was assassinated in a gun and suicide attack in an election rally in Rawalpindi two months later.

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