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Cops rebuild mangled head
28/12/2007 15:40  - (SA)  

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  • Thousands mourn Bhutto
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  • Benazir Bhutto killed
  • Islamabad - Pakistani investigators reconstructed a mangled human head on Friday hoping to identify the man suspected of killing opposition leader Benazir Bhutto in a suicide attack.

    Former Prime Minister Bhutto was killed in a gun and bomb attack as she left an election rally in the city of Rawalpindi on Thursday, plunging nuclear-armed Pakistan into one of the most serious crises in its 60-year history.

    "We have retrieved a head and it has been reconstructed. We also found fingers and we're carrying out DNA tests to make a comparison between the head and fingers," said Saud Aziz, police chief in Rawalpindi, near Islamabad.

    A man shot at Bhutto as she waved to her supporters from the sun-roof of her bullet-proof car. He then blew himself up.

    Bhutto was killed by gunshots to the head and neck, a security official said. The blast killed 17 other people.

    A Reuters reporter at the scene moments after the blast saw a portion of a head, including a blackened ear and half a face on the road. Police cordoned it off.

    Aziz said samples had been taken from the site for testing to determine what type of explosive had been used.

    While Aziz declined to speculate on who might have been behind Bhutto's murder, it bore all the hallmarks of strikes by Islamist militants fighting to destabilise the government of US ally President Pervez Musharraf.

    Musharraf survived two bomb attacks in 2003. A suicide bomber tried to kill former Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz in 2004 and outgoing Interior Minister Aftab Ahmed Khan Sherpao survived two suicide bomb attacks this year that killed nearly 70 people.

    Plots

    Militants were believed to be responsible for at least five bomb attacks on security personnel in recent months in Rawalpindi, where the Pakistani military has its headquarters, and numerous other attacks elsewhere this year.

    Musharraf said in a brief address to the nation after Bhutto was killed that she was a victim of the terrorists the government had been battling.

    Bhutto survived a suicide bomb in October hours after she returned form eight years of self-imposed exile and was parading through the city of Karachi greeting supporters. About 140 people were killed.

    Bhutto had spoken of al-Qaeda plots to kill her but, while she commanded a devoted following in some quarters, she had enemies apart from Islamist militants.

    After the attack on her homecoming procession in Karachi, she made vague references to some Musharraf allies and the head of a security agency who she said were out to get her.

    She has also spoken of a threat from followers of the military dictator who in 1979 executed her father. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, the country's first popularly elected prime minister, had been toppled by the military in 1977.

    But al-Qaeda was the chief suspect in the murder, standing to gain by preserving its remote stronghold, undermining Musharraf and destabilising Pakistan, US government and private analysts said.

    "There are a number of extremist groups within Pakistan that could have carried out the attack ... Al-Qaeda has got to be one of the groups at the top of this list," a US official said.

    A private analyst said militant supporters in Pakistan's security services might have also played a role, but it was unlikely Musharraf himself was involved.

    - Reuters



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