Benazir's niece Fatima to write Bhutto dynasty memoir
Islamabad, Apr. 20: Former Pakistan Premier Benazir Bhutto’s niece, Fatima Bhutto, is reportedly in talks with a British literary agent to write and sell a memoir on the Bhutto dynasty.
Fatima, 25, who already has two books to her credit, has reportedly sent a 12-page proposal for the as-yet-untitled family memoir of Pakistan’s best known political dynasty to top British literary agent David Godwin.
According to the Daily Times, Fatima is likely to meet Godwin, whose clients include Arundhati Roy, Kiran Desai and William Dalrymple, in London shortly.
“It’s the story of her family from the inside – she is the most remarkable woman with an extraordinary story to tell,” Godwin was quoted as saying by the literary website bookseller. com.
“It’s a tragedy of Shakespearean proportions, a family ravaged by death and division,” Godwin added.
Fatima and her step-mother Ghinwa Bhutto have often hinted that they believe Benazir or her widower Asif Ali Zardari had a hand in the killing of her father Murtaza Bhutto.
Godwin said Fatima “believes Benazir was the cause of the death of her father and part of the book will be an investigation into whether that was the case”.
Though Benazir made several warm references in her autobiography, ‘Daughter of the East’, to her niece, Fatima believes her aunt tried to split the Bhutto family apart.
Benazir also disparaged Ghinwa as a “Lebanese belly dancer”, and six months after Murtaza’s death persuaded Fatima’s biological mother, Fauzia, to return to Karachi to seek parental custody.
“It was just vulgar and crude,” Fatima said about the event while talking to the Guardian newspaper after Benazir’s assassination last year.
Fatima did her Master’s degree at London’s School of African and Oriental Studies. Instead of heading a debating society like her aunt at Oxford, she wrote her dissertation on the resistance movement to former president Ziaul Haq.
She published a book of poetry, ‘Whispers of the Desert’, at the age of 15, followed in 2006 by a collection of stories about the 2005 earthquake that killed 73,000 people in Pakistan. (ANI)