PPP to pay tribute to October 18 martyrs
Ghani said that the sacrifices of the martyrs could never be forgotten. "The Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) has never bowed down before or compromised with a dictator. Shaheed Benazir Bhutto returned home on October 18 despite facing threats to her life," said Ghani, adding that several leaders and workers of the PPP had sacrificed their lives for the sake of strengthening democracy in the country.
The minister claimed that if the perpetrators behind the attacks on October 18 had been exposed and arrested, it would have been easy to catch the perpetrators responsible for the tragedy of December 27. He appealed to the Supreme Court to take notice that the accused in this case had been set free by the judiciary and demanded of the apex court to order their arrests again. The apex court should also summon former president General (r) Pervez Musharraf to the courtroom, demanded Ghani. He alleged that instead of registering cases against the accused, after the attacks on October 18, on behalf of the families of the victims, the government registered a case on the state's behalf just to weaken the case.
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Terming the October 18 incident as one of the most horrific incidents of terrorism in the world in which the workers of a "peaceful political party were targeted while welcoming their beloved leader," Ghani said that 177 workers of the PPP were martyred that night and 500 of the party's jiyalas were injured. "Despite authentic information that the life of Shaheed Benazir Bhutto was at risk, the then government of dictator General (r) Pervez Musharraf and his team did not arrange foolproof security for her," he alleged.
Ghani further stated that it was only after the tragedy of October 18 that a case was filed on the PPP's demand. Had the investigation of the incident been transparent and the former dictator had been arrested, the world would have known of the circumstances behind the tragedy of December 27, the minister remarked.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 19th, 2019.
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