Background
Bhutto came from the prominent Sindhi landowning Bhutto family, born to Sir Shah Nawaz Bhutto and Khursheed Begum née Lakhi Bai in his parent's residence near Larkana.
Bhutto came from the prominent Sindhi landowning Bhutto family, born to Sir Shah Nawaz Bhutto and Khursheed Begum née Lakhi Bai in his parent's residence near Larkana.
Bhutto trained as a barrister at Lincoln's Inn in London. He entered politics as one of President Iskander Mirza's cabinet members, before being assigned several ministries during President Ayub Khan's military rule from 1958. Appointed Foreign Minister in 1963, Bhutto was a proponent of Operation Gibraltar in Indian-occupied Kashmir, leading to war with India in 1965. After the Tashkent Agreement ended hostilities, Bhutto fell out with Ayub and was sacked from the government. He founded the PPP in 1967, contesting general elections held by President Yahya Khan in 1970. The Awami League in East Pakistan won a majority of seats, but neither Yahya nor Bhutto signalled yielding power. Subsequent uprisings led to the secession of Bangladesh, and Pakistan losing the war against Bangladesh-allied India in 1971. Bhutto was handed over the presidency in December 1971 and emergency rule was imposed.
By July 1972, Bhutto had recovered 93,000 prisoners of war and 5,000 square miles of Indian-held territory after signing the Simla Agreement. He strengthened ties with China and Saudi Arabia, recognised Bangladesh, and hosted the second Organisation of the Islamic Conference in Lahore in 1974. Domestically, Bhutto's reign saw parliament unanimously approve a new constitution in 1973, upon which he appointed Fazal Ilahi Chaudhry President and switched to the newly empowered office of Prime Minister. He also played an integral role in initiating the country's atomic bomb programme. However, Bhutto's nationalisation of much of Pakistan's fledgling industries, healthcare, and educational institutions led to economic stagnation. After dissolving provincial governments in Balochistan was met with unrest, Bhutto also ordered an army operation in the province in 1973, causing thousands of civilian casualties.
Despite civil disorder, aggravated by incidents of repression by Bhutto's Federal Security Force, the PPP won parliamentary elections in 1977 by a wide margin. However, the opposition alleged widespread vote rigging, and violence escalated across the country. On 5 July that same year, Bhutto was deposed by his appointed army chief General Zia-ul-Haq in a bloodless coup before being controversially tried and executed by the Supreme Court of Pakistan in 1979 for authorising the murder of a political opponent. While Bhutto remains a contentious figure in Pakistan's history, his party, the PPP, remains Pakistan's largest national political party, his daughter Benazir Bhutto twice served as Prime Minister, and his son-in-law and Benazir's husband, Asif Ali Zardari, was the recent President.
Bhutto's government was active foreign policy, which was marked by such actions as out of Pakistan SEATO, the Commonwealth, the so-called Commission on the unification of Korea, the recognition of the GDR and the DRV, the establishment of diplomatic relations with the DPRK at the embassy level, granting diplomatic status representation of the PLO.
Bhutto's government has launched important social and economic reforms aimed at economic development of Pakistan, the role of the state in the economy, restructuring of foreign trade.
With Bhutto as Foreign minister, and Prime minister, Pakistan and Iran had cemented a special relationship , as Iran had provided military assistance to Pakistan.
Bhutto married his second wife, the Iranian-Kurdish Begum Nusrat Ispahani, in Karachi on 8 September 1951.