Question:
Who killed the Banazer Bhutto?
anonymous
2008-01-03 04:48:53 UTC
Who killed the Banazer Bhutto?
27 answers:
anonymous
2008-01-03 04:52:45 UTC
She's a popular female politican over here in Pakistan, where political figures are usually assasinated/condemned to death by court/exiled/or any other method to keep them out of action....what rival wouldn't?

Anyway, if you want the death and all...

It was a gun and bomb suicide attack. The unknown person fired three shots at her first, ebfore blowing himself up with a bomb.

Initally, the reports said that Benazir recieved the three bullets and died because of them. Later, the authorites, in a possible attempt to calm down the over-emotional Pakistan's People Party (Benazir's political party), reported that none of the bullets hit her and she fell down from the impact of blast and cracked her skull on her car's sunroof lever (altho tons of videos show her falling backward from the shots and contradict this theory)

As for the question of who..No one really knows. It could be her rivals, some say i could be her husband Asif Zardari to take his wife's powers (since he didn't call for an autopsy)
anonymous
2008-01-03 04:52:44 UTC
Benazir Bhutto, most probably Islamic Fundamentalists who want to drag Pakistan back to the dark ages.
anonymous
2008-01-03 05:09:49 UTC
That's what I'd like to know. There is a reward for anyone who knows or who can identify two possible killers - caught on camera before the deed.



The reward is about $85,000 - worth a shot.
anonymous
2008-01-03 06:38:11 UTC
The government of Pakistan because if they have election, she would have been President. That bad man would not have liked that as he intends to put his man in office and rule the country through him. Will be a puppet government with that bad man in charge.
Scatty
2008-01-03 04:53:32 UTC
I believe it was an accident. although there is no proof otherwise- and yes I know they found a bullet near to the scene but anyone could have planted that there.



Thats what I think anyway
anonymous
2008-01-03 04:51:32 UTC
The man in the grassy Knowl?
anonymous
2008-01-03 04:53:02 UTC
I kinda think the Pakistan government had the most to lose if she had lived.

So them.



They just jumped on the - blame Al Quada for everything you do wrong and need your people to beleive it was someone else - band-waggon
scotgal
2008-01-03 04:55:12 UTC
not who but what..........terrorism.....same ole same ole, radical, fundamentalists who are brainwashed into thinking dying for their cause is just, when there is no cause to fight for, nobody is threatening them, nor their religion, they just want the world to be all muslim.....what chance do we stand, when they are killing their own people?

bloody looneys......

Benazir Bhutto r.i.p..........may your death not be in vain !
Burrito E ®
2008-01-03 04:53:08 UTC
its like asking the question "where is osama?". no one will ever know the truth, even if the so called "truth" will come out. its politics. nothing is true in politics. honesty is the worst policy in politics.
anonymous
2008-01-03 05:51:46 UTC
Musharraf and his mates, then they blamed Al Quaeda.
Knownow't
2008-01-03 04:51:21 UTC
According to the authorities in Pakistan she banged her head on the sunroof.
no_telling2003
2008-01-03 04:54:56 UTC
The gunman. You killed her name.



Benezir
skullpicker
2008-01-03 07:08:01 UTC
As the lyric goes 'blame it on the weather maaaaan'!
Chris
2008-01-03 04:56:19 UTC
The sunroof. That is the only fact we have at the moment.
anonymous
2008-01-03 04:53:05 UTC
From The TimesJanuary 3, 2008



Scotland Yard sends detectives to investigate Benazir Bhutto's deathZahid Hussain in Islamabad, Jeremy Page in Larkana and Adam Fresco

Scotland Yard detectives are expected in Pakistan by the weekend after President Musharraf announced last night that he had asked Britain to help to investigate the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, the former Prime Minister.



Mr Musharraf’s Government also said that parliamentary elections scheduled for January 8 would be postponed until February 18 because of Ms Bhutto’s death and the rioting that engulfed much of Pakistan afterwards.



The two moves were designed to deflect widespread accusations that Pakistani authorities were covering up evidence relating to the assassination and were trying to push back the elections even further.



“We decided to request a team from Scotland Yard to come,” a stony-faced President Musharraf said in a televised address to the nation.





Q&A: the murder of Benazir Bhutto

Times South Asia Correspondent asks who had most to gain from killing the Pakistan People's Party leader



Scotland Yard to join hunt for Benazir Bhutto's killers

Who's who in the Bhutto dynasty

Benazir Bhutto’s tainted widower Asif Ali Zadari reemerges as kingmaker

Background

Pakistan in chaos as Benazir Bhutto assassinated

Who killed Benazir Bhutto? Main suspects

Obituary: Benazir Bhutto, 1953-2007

Can democracy survive Bhutto killing?

Multimedia

Video: Bhutto assassinated

Bhutto: the background, legacy and life

Pictures: death of Benazir Bhutto



Related Links

Bogus Facebook entry 'is smear on son by regime'

Q&A: the murder of Benazir Bhutto

Pakistan publishes picture of Bhutto 'killer'

Multimedia

Pictures: The Bhutto dynasty

He said that the team would “help to cover our deficiencies in the field of forensics”, adding: “I am sure this investigation with Scotland Yard will be correct and will remove all the doubts surrounding it.”



Scotland Yard confirmed that it was sending officers from the Metropolitan Police’s Counter Terrorism Command. “The Pakistan authorities continue to lead the investigation into Benazir Bhutto’s death,” it said in a brief statement. David Miliband, the Foreign Secretary, said that the team was due to set off by the end of the week.



British authorities said that the five officers will help with forensic science examinations and other matters, but will not become embroiled in the investigation’s politics. That, however, seems almost impossible, given the circumstances of the death of Ms Bhutto, the intensity of the political climate and the persistent allegations that parts of Pakistan’s security services may have been involved.



Forensic examination of the scene of Ms Bhutto’s killing would be severely hindered by the fact that the authorities hosed down the area minutes after the attack.



The Government has blamed Baitullah Mehsoud, a top leader of the Pakistani Taleban, for the assassination, but he has denied any involvement, and Bhutto family members have pointed accusing fingers at the Inter-Services Intelligence agency.



The request by President Musharraf for help from Britain was derided by Asif Ali Zardari, Ms Bhutto’s widower and the new co-chairman of her party, who called for a United Nations investigation, like that into the killing of Rafiq Hariri, the former Prime Minister of Lebanon.



“Now they have remembered Scotland Yard. Why did they not call it when Benazir Bhutto first demanded it after the Karachi blast?” Mr Zardari commented to reporters.



At least 139 people were killed in a double suicide-bomb attack on Ms Bhutto’s motorcade in Karachi on October 18, when she celebrated her return from eight years’ self-imposed exile. Ms Bhutto had repeatedly called for President Musharraf to allow Scotland Yard and the US Federal Bureau of Investigation to help to investigate that attack, but theGovernment refused.



In his speech last night President Musharraf said that he wanted to rule out the “conspiracy theories”. “All the confusion that has been created in the nation must be resolved,” he said. “This is a time for reconciliation and not for confrontation.”



The United States welcomed the decision to call in British police and offered to assist, but said that a UN investigation was not necessary.



President Musharraf said that he had wanted elections to go ahead as planned on Tuesday but that the destruction of election offices in Sindh, the home province of Ms Bhutto, had made that impossible. The Pakistan People’s Party that she led condemned the postponement as a ploy to rob it of sympathy votes, but said that it would take part in the polls.



“People should be peaceful and express their anger through their ballots,” Mr Zardari said.



The party of Nawaz Sharif, another former prime minister, also said that it would participate despite an earlier threat to boycott the election.
anonymous
2008-01-03 04:52:35 UTC
I think the shock wave from the bomb caused her to crack her head in the vehicle and this is what killed her. I don't know why people blow themselves up.
mally
2008-01-03 11:56:06 UTC
Why do you need them to do a job at No10.
anonymous
2008-01-03 05:03:05 UTC
Not me honest I was renting collecting.....Jason W
whyme
2008-01-03 04:52:13 UTC
Fanatic Muslims. She even said they would.
anonymous
2008-01-03 04:56:57 UTC
george bush
anonymous
2008-01-03 04:53:41 UTC
first of all, its benazir..

allegedly

gunshot and

suicide bomber
Why does everyone hate me?
2008-01-03 04:51:37 UTC
I did!
WC
2008-01-03 04:51:20 UTC
No one is sure yet.
bottle babe
2008-01-03 05:24:12 UTC
him as did **** robin
anonymous
2008-01-03 04:51:39 UTC
musharaf... no doubt.
anonymous
2008-01-03 04:53:35 UTC
please read this article:

http://globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=7705
Felix Arcanus
2008-01-03 04:51:30 UTC
i dunno but she was hot... as in very pretty..


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