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BB bears
responsibility for her death: President
DM Monitoring
WASHINGTON—Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf conceded that a gunman
may have shot Benazir Bhutto but said the opposition leader exposed
herself to danger and bore responsibility for her death, CBS News said
on Saturday. Musharraf was also quoted as telling the CBS “60 Minutes”
program to be broadcast on Sunday that his government did everything it
could to provide security for Bhutto, who was killed last week in a gun
and suicide-bomb attack after a political rally.
“For standing up outside the car, I think it was she to blame alone.
Nobody else. Responsibility is hers,” Musharraf said in the interview
taped on Saturday morning. Pakistan’s government has said Bhutto died
when she struck her head on a handle on her vehicle’s sunroof — a
contention widely derided in Pakistan where many people suspect
Musharraf’s government of complicity. The government has also blamed al
Qaeda for the attack.
Musharraf was asked by CBS, which provided excerpts of the interview,
whether a gunshot could have caused Bhutto’s head injury. He replied,
“Yes, yes.” The questioner asked, “So she may have been shot?” and
Musharraf said, “Yes, absolutely, yes. Possibility.” Bhutto’s widower
called on Saturday for a U.N. investigation of the killing.
In an opinion article in the Washington Post, Asif Ali Zardari urged
that a caretaker government be named to oversee national elections that
were postponed until next month and he outlined other standards for
assessing their legitimacy. “Democracy in Pakistan can be saved, and
extremism and fanaticism contained, only if the elections, when they are
held, are free, fair and credible,” he wrote. Zardari is the new
co-chairman of Bhutto’s Pakistan People’s Party, alongside their son
Bilawal.
Musharraf, a U.S. ally in its battle against terrorism, postponed the
general election from Jan. 8 to Feb. 18, and the PPP is expected to
benefit from a wave of sympathy for Bhutto. Musharraf, whose re-election
as president in October is still disputed by the opposition, will need
support in the next parliament and looks likely to have to renew efforts
to reach an understanding with the Bhutto’s party, analysts say.
Zardari has said the PPP would take part in the vote. But the elections,
he said in the Post, must be conducted under a “new, neutral caretaker
government, free of cronies from Musharraf’s party.” He also called for
an independent election commission, monitoring by trained international
observers with access polling stations and an ability to conduct exit
polls, press freedom and an independent judiciary.
He urged that the United States and Britain join the push for a U.N.
probe. Britain has sent a team from Scotland Yard to help the government
of nuclear-armed Pakistan investigate the killing, and Washington has
endorsed the step. However, Zardari said, “an investigation conducted by
the government of Pakistan will have no credibility, in my country or
anywhere else.”
Bhutto had complained to an acquaintance shortly before she died that
the Pakistani government was not meeting her security pleas. CBS asked
Musharraf whether he believed the government did everything possible for
her security. “Absolutely,” he said. “She was given more security than
any other person.” |