Asif Ali Zardari – singled out by fate to become Benazir Bhutto's husbandand who, subsequently, did everything he could to prevent himself from beingreturned to obscurity – is about to become the new President of Pakistan.Oily-mouthed hangers-on, never in short supply in Pakistan, will orchestrate afew celebratory shows and the ready tongues of old cronies (some now appointedambassadors to western capitals) will speak of how democracy has been enhanced.Zardari's close circle of friends, with whom he shared the spoils of power thelast time around and who have remained loyal, refusing all inducements to turnstate's evidence in the corrruption cases against him, will also be delighted.Small wonder then that definitions of democracy in Pakistan differ from personto person. There will be no expressions of joy on the streets to mark thetransference of power from a moth-eaten general to a worm-eaten politician. Theaffection felt in some quarters for the Bhutto family is non-transferable. IfBenazir were still alive, Zardari would not have been given any official post.She had been considering two other senior politicians for the presidency. Hadshe been more democratically inclined she would never have treated her politicalparty so scornfully, reducing it to the status of a family heirloom, bequeathedto her son, with her husband as the regent till the boy came of age.