|
President not
satisfied with BB’s probe
By Our Special Correspondent
ISLAMABAD—President Pervez Musharraf said Thursday that uncertainty
remained about the exact cause of Benazir Bhutto’s death, despite an
initial government report that she was killed when a bomb blast slammed
her head into her vehicle. “One should not give a statement that’s 100
percent final. That’s the flaw that we suffer from,” Musharraf said at a
news conference, noting that more evidence was emerging about the
attack. “We needed more experience, maybe more forensic and technical
experience that our people don’t have. Therefore I thought Scotland Yard
may be more helpful.”
Musharraf said he also reached out to British investigators for
assistance to dispel accusations that Pakistan’s military or
intelligence services were involved. “We don’t mind going to any extent,
as nobody is involved from the government or agency side,” he said.
Speaking a week after Bhutto’s assassination in a shooting and suicide
bombing, Musharraf denied there had been a security lapse and implied
that Bhutto, who was greeting supporters through the sunroof of her
armored vehicle at the time of the attack, was partly responsible.
“Who is to be blamed for her coming out (of) her vehicle?” he asked,
adding that others in the vehicle had not been hurt in the attack.
Bhutto had been allowed to have the police superintendent of her choice
in charge of her security, had four vehicles with a total of 30 officers
with her, and 1,000 more police deployed at the Rawalpindi rally where
she was slain, he said. Musharraf said it was the responsibility of
Bhutto’s party leadership to stop supporters from swarming her vehicle,
as any police action against them would have involved a baton charge or
the firing of tear gas.
He conceded there were shortcomings in Pakistan’s handling of the case,
including the hosing down of the bomb site hours after the attack,
widely seen as undermining a detailed forensic examination. But he
dismissed any suggestion there was a plan to conceal evidence. “I’m not
fully satisfied. I will accept that: cleaning the area. Why did they do
that? If you are meaning they did that by design I would not say no.
It’s just inefficiency, people thinking things have to be cleared,
traffic has to go through,” he said.
Musharraf also denied reports that al-Qaida was getting stronger in
Pakistan, but said the country faced an increasing threat from Taliban
militants. He blamed Islamic militant leaders Baitullah Mehsud and
Maulana Fazlullah for 19 suicide attacks in the past three months. Over
the same period, militant-related violence killed 400 people and wounded
900 others, he said. “We know that these two people are responsible,” he
said.
A day after Bhutto’s killing, government officials accused Mehsud of
orchestrating the attack. A Mehsud spokesman denied responsibility.
Musharraf did not directly blame Mehsud on Thursday. A senior police
investigator said Pakistani police have already secured key evidence,
including the suspected bomber’s remains, two pistols and cell phones.
Scotland Yard investigators, with their superior forensic techniques,
could help determine whether either pistol was fired in the attack and
also could examine video, said the official, speaking on condition of
anonymity because of the sensitivity of the investigation. |