Fatima Bhutto

Fatima Bhutto (Urdu: فاطمہ بھُٹّو; Sindhi: فاطمه ڀٽو, born 29 May 1982) is a Pakistani writer and columnist.

Her father met Ghinwa Bhutto, a Lebanese ballet teacher in 1989 during his exile in Syria and they married.

Her biological mother Fauzia Fasihudin unsuccessfully tried to gain parental custody of Bhutto.

in South Asian Studies from the SOAS, University of London in 2005, there she wrote her dissertation on the resistance movement in Pakistan.

In the book Bhutto accuses her aunt Benazir and her husband Asif Zardari for killing her father Murtaza.

[18] In 2015 Bhutto's short story titled Democracy, an e-book, under Penguin Books was released.

Tash Aw in the Financial Times described it as a "razor-sharp, intriguing introduction to the various pop phenomena emerging from Asia.

In an interview, she has stated that for now she prefers to remain active through her activism and writing, rather than through elected office[1] and that she has to "rule a political career out entirely because of the effect of dynasties on Pakistan", referring to the Bhutto family dynasty and its ties to Pakistani politics.

On April 27, 2023, Bhutto married Graham Byra, who adopted the name Gibran following his conversion to Islam.