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All eyes on Benazir's children now
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December 28, 2007 20:23 IST

Three years ago, former Pakistan premier Benazir Bhutto's [Images] husband Asif Ali Zardari had expressed a desire to see their three children join politics.

With Bhutto, 54, being killed in a suicide attack in Rawalpindi, the limelight is now shifted to her three children-- two daughters and a son.

Zardari, who was in Karachi in December 2004, told a Pakistan People's Party (PPP) delegation that he would like to see Bilawal, Bakhtawar and Asifa start their political careers with the party's students federation and its women's wing.

"Zardari said he wanted Bakhtawar and Asifa to learn from the seniors in the ladies' wing," Nafisa Raja, then president of the Karachi chapter of the PPP, was quoted as saying by the Daily Times.

Zardari also hinted that he would expect his son to join the PPP students' body. Bhutto's daughters Bakhtawar, 17, and Asifa, 14, are studying in Dubai, while her 19-year-old son Bilawal is enrolled at Oxford.

Bilal is on an Eid break and was to return to London [Images] next week to resume his studies. Just 10 days ago, Bhutto and Zardari celebrated their 20th wedding anniversary.

Zardari, 51, who was with his three children in their sprawling bungalow in Dubai when the news of the assassination was broken to him, initially refused to believe that Bhutto was dead. When the news did sink in, he said, "We are devastated. It is a shock."

Relatives said Bilawal, who uses his mother's surname, was inconsolable over her death. But in the wake of her assassination, many believe he may be a possible future contender for his family's political legacy.

With a keen interest in history and politics, Bilawal enrolled at Oxford, the same school from which his mother and grandfather graduated.

Earlier this year, media reports said Bhutto was grooming her son to carry on the family's legacy while she was still in self-exile.

She registered him as a Pakistani citizen through the country's embassy in Dubai, making him eligible to vote.

PPP leaders had previously said Bilawal would not enter politics until he attained his degree, but those comments were themselves taken as a hint of his future intentions.

Zardari, the son of former parliamentarian Hakim Ali Zardari, has had other members of his family in politics.

Two of his sisters, Faryal Talpur and Azra Pechuho, have also held political posts.


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