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Christian Action Network
A team of British anti-terrorism police started
working with Pakistani investigators on Friday after flying in to
help them investigate the killing of Benazir Bhutto, officials said.
The specialists from Scotland Yard arrived amid raging controversy
over the assassination of the former premier, which sparked a wave
of bloody unrest across Pakistan and forced the postponement of
elections.
President Pervez Musharraf said he had invited the British squad
because he was unhappy with his country's handling of the probe,
including the possible washing away of evidence after the gun and
suicide attack.
"The Scotland Yard team have started interacting with Pakistani
investigators for technical assistance in the assassination probe,"
interior ministry spokesman Brigadier Javed Cheema told AFP.
The team of around six members is later due to examine evidence
including the car in which the opposition leader died and visit the
crime scene, security officials said.
Musharraf said on Thursday that he hoped the Scotland Yard team
would help dispel "conspiracy theories" about Bhutto's death at an
election rally on December 27, which the government has blamed on
Al-Qaeda.
Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party (PPP) said it believed the British
investigators would fail to shed any light on the murder.
"This Scotland Yard team... what will it do here? It will work under
the patronage of the government. It is going to be a meaningless
exercise," said Farooq Naik, a lawyer and Bhutto's top aide.
The party has ridiculed the government account of her death, which
said the shooter had missed her and that she died fracturing her
skull by smashing her head against her car's sunroof.
Many Bhutto supporters have blamed the president for her death -- at
the very least for failing to provide sufficient security after she
only narrowly survived Pakistan's worst terror attack in October,
which left scores dead.
The anger of Bhutto's followers was still raw at the family
mausoleum in the rural southern village of Ghari Khuda Baksh, where
Bhutto is buried alongside her father, former premier Zulfiqar Ali
Bhutto, who was hanged in 1979.
"I prayed to Allah to punish the killers and put them in hell,"
mourner Allah Buksh Bhutto told AFP after Friday prayers at the
graveside attended by thousands of people.
The party has highlighted reports, acknowledged for the first time
by Musharraf on Thursday, that the crime scene had been quickly
hosed down after her murder, possibly destroying evidence.
But Musharraf denied that he or Pakistan's powerful intelligence
agencies had either mounted a cover-up or been involved in the
killing.
He reacted angrily when asked if the Britons would be allowed to
question key politicians and an intelligence chief Bhutto had
accused of plotting to kill her, saying they would not be allowed to
go on a "wild goose chase."
Musharraf is struggling to keep a lid on a wave of deadly unrest
sparked by Bhutto's death as the country prepares for general
elections which have now been delayed by nearly six weeks to
February 18.
The PPP, the country's largest party, has alleged the delay is an
attempt to give Musharraf's allies time to fix the result. He denied
the polls would be tainted.
EU election observers Friday said they would deploy a team of nearly
100 across Pakistan in the coming weeks and on election day, to
ensure the polls are "free and fair."
"I really invite all (political) parties, civil society, and the
media to be active on the ground in respective communities, in
ensuring that this is the people's election," chief observer Michael
Gahler said here.
AFP