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Benazir seeks
foreign help in attack probe
Bureau Report
KARACHI—Benazir Bhutto urged Governmnet to enlist international experts
to help find those behind last week’s suicide attack which turned the
former premier’s homecoming parade into bloody carnage. Bhutto made the
plea after visiting hospitals to meet some of those injured in
Thursday’s blasts, which killed 139 people and ruined her planned
triumphant return to Pakistan after eight years in self-imposed exile.
“We want the government of Pakistan to seek the assistance of the
international community,” the two-time premier told a group of foreign
reporters at her Karachi home. “They have anti-terrorism experts who
have the technical expertise to investigate attacks of this nature.”
Bhutto, the first female leader of an Islamic nation, also reiterated
her pledge to stay in Pakistan to campaign ahead of general elections in
January, seen as a key step to restoring civilian rule in the country of
160 million. “We will have to modify our campaign to some extent because
of the suicide bombings but we are not going to stop our campaign to
reach the public,” she said. “The militants are trying to disrupt the
political process because they do not want the people to be mobilised,
they do not want the moderate majority of the people of Pakistan to
stand up.” The attack on her homecoming parade had cast doubt over her
previous plans to tour the country to whip up support ahead of the
crucial polls. A shrapnel-packed suicide bomb ripped through a crowd of
hundreds of thousands of supporters late on Thursday who had gathered on
the streets to cheer Bhutto’s return to Pakistan only hours earlier. She
set foot on Pakistani soil for the first time since 1999 after President
Pervez Musharraf dropped corruption charges against her in the hope her
popularity could shore up his grip on power.
She had mostly worked out a power-sharing deal with him, but his
re-election as president earlier this month is now being challenged in
the courts, as is the corruption amnesty signed by Musharraf. Earlier
Sunday, Bhutto visited those injured in the bombings at two hospitals,
making her first public outing in Karachi since the attacks.
Flanked by heavy security carrying automatic weapons, she waved to
dozens of supporters upon leaving Jinnah Hospital after she handed out
envelopes containing 5,000 rupees (84 dollars) to the injured. “My
wounds were healed when I met Benazir Bhutto — it was the biggest thing
in my life. I feel no pain now,” Imran Ally, hit in the leg and chest by
metal debris, told reporters.
Bhutto insisted that her homecoming was not a mistake despite the
carnage, and hit out at unidentified Islamic militants blamed for the
blasts. “I think that the rally showed that the people of Pakistan
reject the militants and extremists, which shows that the people of
Pakistan are not intimidated by bombs and threats,” she said.
Bhutto has said she received a warning prior to her return from Dubai
about members of the Al-Qaeda network, Pakistani and Afghan Taliban and
a Karachi-based militant group who might have been planning to attack
her. Police questioned three people Sunday over the attack, which
sparked a third straight day of low-level protests by her supporters in
several cities in southern Pakistan, officials said. The three suspects
were linked to a car from which an attacker threw a grenade, a police
official said, shortly before the suicide blast. |