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By Adam Phillips
New York
30 December 2007
News of the assassination of Pakistani opposition leader Bhenazir Bhutto at a political rally in Rawalpindi on Thursday was a seismic event in that politically volatile nation. But Bhutto's murder also reverberated powerfully in neighborhoods around the world where Pakistanis have come to live. To gauge the reaction in the United States, VOA's Adam Phillips traveled to a neighborhood in Brooklyn, New York, that locals call "Little Pakistan."
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| Mosques in Midwood Brooklyn were unusually crowded following Bhutto's assassination, while many shops were closed in mourning |
"I heard that she got killed and hit with a bullet on her neck and her head," he said about the assassination. "I felt really angry because Musharraf is doing bad stuff and she was about to win the election to be prime minister. And Musharraf didn't let her win it."
Ali Nawaz, a middle aged man standing nearby, said he feels grief, rather than anger.
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| This man felt grief for Bhutto and her family, and all Pakistanis at home and abroad |
Evidence suggests that Bhutto was killed by a suicide bomber. If so, he or she was presumably hoping to become a holy martyr in the cause against her. But for Sajad, who had just finished his prayers, that assassin was deeply misguided and will pay a price in the afterlife.
"This brutal killer, he make her a target, he is going to paradise? That's what he's thinking? Allah [is] gonna put him in the worst place because he put the country in darkness," said Sajad. "He killed democracy and prosperity and hopes of the people and he's thinking he is going to Paradise? I wish I would have been there when the bullet come into her!"
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| Bazah Roohi and her friends have set up a makeshift shrine to Bhutto, who was the Muslim world's first female head of state |
"Yesterday I was sleeping at 8:30, and one of my friends, he called me and he said 'I am sorry to wake you up because there is a very bad news. Benzi died.' I jumped from my bed and there on the TV was the news. About the first 15 minutes I was like [a] statue. And after that I cried a lot," said Roohi as she described her reaction to the assassination.
"She deserves it, to cry for her," she added. "She was elected prime minister twice and you know in Islamic countries, in Pakistan, the women don't have much rights. And she fought hard. I was crying for her and I was crying for our country. I think democracy died. Because she was the big sign of democracy and she was the big leader of the big party."
"She wasn't an angel," answered Roohi, when she was told "of course, she also had her critics. When she was prime minister she got into lots of trouble for corruption and nepotism." She said, "We all have some weak points in our personalities."
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| Mohammad Razvi advises his Pakistani clients to call the homeland and tell their loved ones to stay off the streets |
" The people here when she came here, they were able to talk to her openly. Many individuals here if they were back home it would be too difficult to have communication or talk to her. But here, when she came, she was able to do that. It didn't matter if you were a leader or a person on the street, she'd talk to you," he said.
According to news reports, fires and looting were widespread Friday in many cities across Pakistan, and Razvi says his clients are deeply concerned for the safety of their relatives back home.
"We're telling the individuals, the members here to call up their loved ones in Pakistan to stay at home because of the riots that are breaking out and all the commotion that is
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| Malik Saleem Akber is pessimistic about Pakistan's prospects for democracy |
Malik Saleem Akber would agree. He is one of many Pakistani-Americans who are pessimistic about their homeland's political prospects following the Bhutto assassination.
"And what will happen now is [that] the path we were about to start to democracy after the elections is not going to be happening any more. There will be very strict martial law in the country and I see the basic rights of the people will be taken away. The media will again be under pressure and we will go back another ten or fifteen years," concluded Akber.
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