KARACHI, Oct 17: His children wear headbands with Benazir Bhutto’s picture, but Abdul Raziq has not come to pay any ordinary tribute to the former Pakistani prime minister -- he has doused them and himself in petrol.

“I love Benazir and I will burn us all if the government does not back down,” the wild-eyed 40-year-old labourer says after authorities in Karachi ordered pro-Bhutto hoardings in the city to be torn down.

His sons Rajab Ali and Ali Raza, aged four and six, weep as they are drenched in the flammable liquid while daughters Rakhshanda, seven, and Iqra, 10, look bewildered as a crowd cheers outside the Karachi Press Club.

Eventually senior members from Bhutto’s Pakistan People’s Party who had been holding a press conference inside the building intervene, taking a cigarette lighter from Raziq, and the family are led off.

Even if there is a whiff of stage management to go with the petrol fumes, the scene nevertheless raises questions about the personality cult that surrounds Bhutto, her late father Zulfikar Ali Bhutto and their party.

This city has been decked with countless posters of Bhutto ahead of her planned homecoming on Thursday from eight years in exile.

Almost every single lamppost on the 10-kilometre road from the airport to the city centre has an array of PPP flags. Party supporters danced wildly in the traffic on Tuesday night as they celebrated.

In another part of Karachi, a parched-looking Mohammad Ashraf Raza, 35, pedals a bicycle adorned with Bhutto posters in the party’s signature red, green and black.

He says he has just arrived in Karachi after spending a week cycling from his hometown in Vehari, 700 kilometres to the north in Punjab.

“I have travelled for the last week but I am not tired because I love Benazir Bhutto,” he says.

The cult around the Bhuttos began when Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was hanged by then military dictator Ziaul Haq in 1979.

At least one supporter burned himself to death at the time and there have been similar incidents reported in the intervening years, including one in 2004 over corruption cases brought against the former prime minister.

The charges were dropped as part of an amnesty deal by President Pervez Musharraf that paved the way for her return home.

The party has also profited by selling itself as an advocate for the poor and disenfranchised in Pakistan’s feudally-based society -- despite the Bhutto family’s own history as major landowners.

The party itself does not deny that there is a cult-like element to its support base.

“In the subcontinent, politics is like that,” senior PPP member and senator Safdar Abbasi said in an interview at Bilawal House, Bhutto’s residence in Karachi, as workmen rushed to spruce up the building for her homecoming.

“It is easy to criticise this cult, but I think that Ms Bhutto, after her father’s death, has earned this stature with her party. Everybody in the party believes she is our main vote-getter,” Abbasi said.—AFP

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