Danh ngôn của Benazir Bhutto (Sứ mệnh: 8)

Democracy is necessary to peace and to undermining the forces of terrorism.
I am constitutionally competent to contest the elections.
Military hardliners called me a 'security threat' for promoting peace in South Asia and for supporting a broad-based government in Afghanistan.
The military destabilised my government on politically motivated charges.
The government I led gave ordinary people peace, security, dignity, and opportunity to progress.
As a woman leader, I thought I brought a different kind of leadership. I was interested in women's issues, in bringing down the population growth rate... as a woman, I entered politics with an additional dimension - that of a mother.
My father was the Prime Minister of Pakistan. My grandfather had been in politics, too; however, my own inclination was for a job other than politics. I wanted to be a diplomat, perhaps do some journalism - certainly not politics.
Whatever my aims and agendas were, I never asked for power.
Democracy needs support, and the best support for democracy comes from other democracies.
Pakistan is heir to an intellectual tradition of which the illustrious exponent was the poet and philosopher Mohammad Iqbal. He saw the future course for Islamic societies in a synthesis between adherence to the faith and adjustment to the modern age.