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UN report leaves Zardari as the most logical suspect in the Benazir murder case?

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Musharraf govt. responsible for BB assassination - GEO.tv

Musharraf govt. responsible for BB assassination

NEW YORK: United Nations (UN) commission has held responsible the former President Pervez Musharraf-led government for assassination of Benazir Bhutto due to provision of poor security measures.

“Musharraf government failed to provide foolproof security to Ms. Bhutto which ultimately led to a lethal assault on her”, the report’s beginning statement said.

There was a serious lack of professionalism in security arrangements, either by the government of Pakistan or by the PPP party, which were jointly providing security to caravan of Benazir in Liaquat Bagh, said it.
 
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Musharraf govt. responsible for BB assassination - GEO.tv

Musharraf govt. responsible for BB assassination

NEW YORK: United Nations (UN) commission has held responsible the former President Pervez Musharraf-led government for assassination of Benazir Bhutto due to provision of poor security measures.

“Musharraf government failed to provide foolproof security to Ms. Bhutto which ultimately led to a lethal assault on her”, the report’s beginning statement said.

There was a serious lack of professionalism in security arrangements, either by the government of Pakistan or by the PPP party, which were jointly providing security to caravan of Benazir in Liaquat Bagh, said it.

The title sort of implies the Musharraf government was complicit in the assassination, when the point being made is that the Musharraf government, and the PPP as well since they were 'jointly providing security', exhibited a lack of professionalism.
 
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Musharraf govt. responsible for BB assassination - GEO.tv

Musharraf govt. responsible for BB assassination

NEW YORK: United Nations (UN) commission has held responsible the former President Pervez Musharraf-led government for assassination of Benazir Bhutto due to provision of poor security measures.

“Musharraf government failed to provide foolproof security to Ms. Bhutto which ultimately led to a lethal assault on her”, the report’s beginning statement said.

There was a serious lack of professionalism in security arrangements, either by the government of Pakistan or by the PPP party, which were jointly providing security to caravan of Benazir in Liaquat Bagh, said it.

Why the hell millions of dollars have been spent to know this which was already a fact. There has been some reports in the Media that Rehman Malik was held responsible initially that government asked UN to delay the report and probably changed the content to suit them. No one could be caught, no one will be caught and no one will be sentenced. No matter how important that women was, no matter how many loved her, no matter which she meant to PPP (Real PPP), this chapter is going to go under the carpet.

You were a great women but sorry, we cannot catch a single person who might have killed you. So Mohterma BB, please carry on your journey in haven, this party is incapable and unwilling to get you any justice at present. Have a good afterlife.
 
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Is this what we paid million of dollars for??? Didn't we know the answer already????

POOR SECURITY
Is always The reason/Cause(as a result of high level investigations)in such high profile Assassinations, and the real story is brushed under the carpet. It will Never point towards Specific Individuals. Raat Gai, Bath Gai, every buddy happy and new grounds found to indulge people in, keeping them away from the real problems.




:pakistan:


Adios
 
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Benazir Bhutto 'left to mercy of assassins by security chief' - Telegraph

Benazir Bhutto 'left to mercy of assassins by security chief'
The former Pakistan Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto was left to the mercy of her the assassins by her security chief who abandoned her in the minutes before her death, a key witness has told the United Nations inquiry into her death.

Dean Nelson in Islamabad
Published: 10:00PM BST 15 Apr 2010

Chaudhry Mohummad Aslam, one of Ms Bhutto's protocol officers who was guarding her vehicle when she was shot, said that Pakistan's interior minister Rehman Malik and current law minister Babar Awan were to blame for security lapses which allowed her killers to strike.

Ms Bhutto was killed on December 27, 2007 as she left an election campaign rally in Rawalpindi's Liaqat Bagh. She was standing through the sunroof of her Pajero jeep waving to supporters as she left the venue when she was shot through the head by a marksman. She slumped down into the car and died in the arms of her political secretary Naheed Khan. An explosion which followed the gunfire left more than 20 people dead.


But according to Mr Aslam, who was himself wounded in the bomb blast, Ms Bhutto's killers were able to get close to her because of the sudden departure of Mr Malik and Mr Awan in a private Mercedes reserved as an alternative car for Ms Bhutto.

The United Nations was on Thursday night due to release a report into the circumstances surrounding Ms Bhutto's assassination and sources close to the investigation have said it is expected to highlight a series of security failings.

In an exclusive interview with The Daily Telegraph, Mr Aslam said there was a car was in front of Ms Bhutto's Pajero as she prepared to leave, and that the two ministers commandeered it in breach of protocol rules and ordered the driver to speed to the home of her husband Asif Zardari, now the country's president.

When the police and private security teams saw the car speed away, they followed quickly behind, he said, leaving Ms Bhutto with no security protection.

"Rehman Malik and Babar Awan forced the driver of the Mercedes to leave immediately. When the [motorbike] pilot saw the car was going at full speed, he drove his bike to lead them. The police security squad and private security also followed them. When the Mitsubishi Pajero in which Benazir Bhutto was sitting came out of the gate there was no police, no private security, nothing was there the security thought she was in the Mercedes," he said.

Mr Aslam said he saw laser beams flash past his party leader's car and that she slumped down inside the car as the sound of bullets flew around. An explosion followed the shots, leaving 35 people dead, he said.

He had been just in front of Ms Bhutto's car when a bomb exploded a few metres away. He was seen in television footage at the time sitting bewildered among dead colleagues and stray shoes with an open leg wound.

Fauzia Wahab, the Pakistan Peoples Party's information secretary and a close aide of President Asif Zardari, confirmed that Mr Malik and Mr Awan had left Ms Bhutto behind in Liaqat Bagh. "Once she [Ms Bhutto] was down [from the stage], they grabbed the car and rushed to Mr Zardari's house to welcome her," she said.

She said on the night before the rally, Ms Bhutto had been visited at her residence by the head of the ISI intelligence agency to warn her there was a threat to her life and that she should cancel the meeting in Liaqat Bagh. It is not clear whether Mr Malik, as her head of security, was aware of the threat when he left Ms Bhutto's convoy.
 
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No $hit homey, so the poor security killed her. Tell us something we do not know.
 
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Well, despite Geo focusing solely on Musharraf in the headline, the report does point out that security was a joint responsibility between the GoP and the PPP, so what does that say about the PPP?
 
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Benazir Bhutto 'left to mercy of assassins by security chief' - Telegraph

Benazir Bhutto 'left to mercy of assassins by security chief'
The former Pakistan Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto was left to the mercy of her the assassins by her security chief who abandoned her in the minutes before her death, a key witness has told the United Nations inquiry into her death.

Dean Nelson in Islamabad
Published: 10:00PM BST 15 Apr 2010

Chaudhry Mohummad Aslam, one of Ms Bhutto's protocol officers who was guarding her vehicle when she was shot, said that Pakistan's interior minister Rehman Malik and current law minister Babar Awan were to blame for security lapses which allowed her killers to strike.

Ms Bhutto was killed on December 27, 2007 as she left an election campaign rally in Rawalpindi's Liaqat Bagh. She was standing through the sunroof of her Pajero jeep waving to supporters as she left the venue when she was shot through the head by a marksman. She slumped down into the car and died in the arms of her political secretary Naheed Khan. An explosion which followed the gunfire left more than 20 people dead.


But according to Mr Aslam, who was himself wounded in the bomb blast, Ms Bhutto's killers were able to get close to her because of the sudden departure of Mr Malik and Mr Awan in a private Mercedes reserved as an alternative car for Ms Bhutto.

The United Nations was on Thursday night due to release a report into the circumstances surrounding Ms Bhutto's assassination and sources close to the investigation have said it is expected to highlight a series of security failings.

In an exclusive interview with The Daily Telegraph, Mr Aslam said there was a car was in front of Ms Bhutto's Pajero as she prepared to leave, and that the two ministers commandeered it in breach of protocol rules and ordered the driver to speed to the home of her husband Asif Zardari, now the country's president.

When the police and private security teams saw the car speed away, they followed quickly behind, he said, leaving Ms Bhutto with no security protection.

"Rehman Malik and Babar Awan forced the driver of the Mercedes to leave immediately. When the [motorbike] pilot saw the car was going at full speed, he drove his bike to lead them. The police security squad and private security also followed them. When the Mitsubishi Pajero in which Benazir Bhutto was sitting came out of the gate there was no police, no private security, nothing was there the security thought she was in the Mercedes," he said.

Mr Aslam said he saw laser beams flash past his party leader's car and that she slumped down inside the car as the sound of bullets flew around. An explosion followed the shots, leaving 35 people dead, he said.

He had been just in front of Ms Bhutto's car when a bomb exploded a few metres away. He was seen in television footage at the time sitting bewildered among dead colleagues and stray shoes with an open leg wound.

Fauzia Wahab, the Pakistan Peoples Party's information secretary and a close aide of President Asif Zardari, confirmed that Mr Malik and Mr Awan had left Ms Bhutto behind in Liaqat Bagh. "Once she [Ms Bhutto] was down [from the stage], they grabbed the car and rushed to Mr Zardari's house to welcome her," she said.

She said on the night before the rally, Ms Bhutto had been visited at her residence by the head of the ISI intelligence agency to warn her there was a threat to her life and that she should cancel the meeting in Liaqat Bagh. It is not clear whether Mr Malik, as her head of security, was aware of the threat when he left Ms Bhutto's convoy.

Unlike Geo's anti-Musharraf agenda, this report seems to strongly imply that it was BB's handpicked security chiefs that might have caused the security breach.
 
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Bhutto murder investigation flawed: UN

Last Updated: Thursday, April 15, 2010 | 7:25 PM ET

Pakistani police deliberately failed to properly investigate the 2007 assassination of former prime minister and opposition leader Benazir Bhutto — a political murder that could have been prevented, a UN report says.

A special United Nations commission began looking into the assassination last July as part of a deal with the Pakistani government. It delivered its conclusions Thursday afternoon.

"There was little to no focus placed on investigating those further up the hierarchy in the planning, the financing and the execution of the assassination," Chile's UN ambassador, Heraldo Munoz, who chaired the commission, said at a news conference.

Munoz also said the Pakistani government "failed in its primary responsibility to provide protection" to Bhutto on the day of her death, despite clear warnings of threats on her life.

Bhutto, whose family constituted a political dynasty in Pakistan, served as prime minister from 1988-1990 and 1993-96 before she went into exile amid corruption allegations. She returned to her homeland in October 2007 to lead the opposition Pakistan Peoples Party in a parliamentary election campaign.

On Dec. 27, 2007, Bhutto had just finished addressing thousands of supporters at a rally in the city of Rawalpindi, about 18 kilometres south of Islamabad, when a man stepped from the crowd and shot her before blowing himself up. Bhutto was hit in the neck and chest, and 23 other people died in the ensuing suicide blast.

The government at the time of Bhutto's murder, led by President Pervez Musharraf, blamed the killing on Baitullah Mehsud, a Pakistani militant commander with reported links to al-Qaeda. Officials at the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency also said Mehsud was the chief suspect.

But the Pakistan People's Party repeatedly hinted that Musharraf or his allies were involved and demanded a UN probe, asserting it was the only way the whole truth would be revealed.

Munoz on Thursday refrained from directly inculpating Musharraf, but he said a new, proper criminal investigation into Bhutto's death needs to look at not only the possible involvement of al-Qaeda, Mehsud and the Taliban but also the Pakistani establishment, including the military, intelligence agencies and the country's business elite.

"The criminal investigation of the assassination … must include a focus on those who might have been involved," Munoz said. "It should follow all leads and explore all reasonable hypotheses."
'Hindered and prejudiced'

The UN report levels 15 major criticisms at the Pakistani government's actions around the Bhutto assassination, including that the subsequent murder investigation was deliberately slipshod.

Pakistani officials announced just 24 hours after the killing that Mehsud was their primary suspect, "well before" it was reasonable to do so, the UN report says. This "hindered and prejudiced the subsequent investigation," Munoz said. To this day, police still have not seriously rethought whether Mehsud was involved, despite his denials, he said.

The police probe was also marred by the involvement of the country's intelligence agencies, which meddled in crime-scene evidence gathering and drew hasty conclusions about the culprits that "pre-empted, prejudiced and hindered the subsequent investigation," Munoz said.

"The pervasive reach, control and clandestine role of intelligence agencies in Pakistani society," he continued, "has undermined the rule of law and distorted civil-military relations. At the same time it has contributed to widespread public mistrust."

In the wake of her assassination, Bhutto's party won parliamentary elections and eventually forced Musharraf to resign. Bhutto's widower, Asif Ali Zardari, became president in September 2008.

CBC News - World - Bhutto murder investigation flawed: UN
 
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UN inquiry says Benazir Bhutto murder was 'avoidable'

Police security provided for Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto on the day of her killing was "fatally insufficient", a report has said.

The finding comes from an independent commission appointed by the UN.

Ms Bhutto was killed in a gun and bomb attack after addressing an election rally near Islamabad more than two years ago.

The commission was set up in July last year in response to a request from Pakistan.

The commission also says it believes the Pakistani police's failure to probe the death of Ms Bhutto was "deliberate".

Ms Bhutto's death could have been prevented if the government under the former military leader, Pervez Musharraf, had taken the necessary measures "to respond to the extraordinary, fresh and urgent security risks that they knew she faced," it adds.

The commission has delayed the report's release for two weeks.

The delay came after an urgent request from Ms Bhutto's widower, Pakistani President Asif Zardari.

Members of Ms Bhutto's political party did not trust the military-led government running the country when she died.

And her widower, Mr Zardari, continued to call for a UN investigation even after he became president and his party was elected to power.

Strong emotions

The three-member panel was mandated to investigate the facts and circumstances of Ms Bhutto's death, not assign criminal responsibility.

But anything related to her assassination stirs up strong emotions, and suspense was heightened when Mr Zardari made a last-minute request to delay the report's release by two weeks, the BBC's Barbara Plett says.

Supporters of Pakistani opposition leader Benazir Bhutto carry her coffin after her body was released from hospital in Rawalpindi, 27 December 2007.

Q&A: Benazir Bhutto inquiry

It is not clear why. The government said it wanted extra time to include input from Afghanistan, the United States and Saudi Arabia, three countries that had apparently warned Ms Bhutto of a death threat.

But while accepting the delay, the commission insisted its report was complete.

The former military leader, Pervez Musharraf, had declared that the late head of the Pakistani Taliban, Beitullah Mehsud, was the assassin. And Ms Bhutto herself wrote that four suicide squads were after her, some linked to al-Qaeda.

But she also accused a group of senior politicians and intelligence officials of plotting to kill her, and many of her followers blame elements of the military establishment and Mr Musharraf's government for her death.

BBC News - UN inquiry says Benazir Bhutto murder was 'avoidable'
 
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U.N. Report Finds Faults in Pakistani Bhutto Inquiry

By SABRINA TAVERNISE
Published: April 15, 2010


ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — A United Nations investigation into the assassination of the former opposition leader Benazir Bhutto has concluded that the failure of Pakistani authorities to effectively investigate the killing was “deliberate,” saying that the country’s powerful intelligence agency “severely hampered” local authorities.
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The 65-page report, issued in New York on Thursday, did not answer the question of who killed Ms. Bhutto, or even give the precise cause of death. It was concerned instead with looking into the facts and circumstances surrounding her death in a suicide bombing and gun attack at a political rally in December 2007.

“The commission believes that the failures of the police and other officials to react effectively to Ms. Bhutto’s assassination were, in most cases, deliberate,” the long awaited report said. “In other cases, the failures were driven by uncertainty in the minds of many officials as to the extent of the involvement of intelligence agencies.”

The report catalogued a litany of failings on the part of the authorities before and after the attack that killed Ms. Bhutto, leaving an impression of purposeful obstruction and raising questions that the authorities had something to hide.

These included a decision by Saud Aziz, the police chief in Rawalpindi, the city where the assassination took place, to hose down the crime scene less than two hours after the attack. That forced investigators to spend seven hours following the water current and wading through a drainage sewer to collect valuable evidence, including a bullet casing.

The decision was taken after he received a call from army headquarters, possibly including Maj. Gen. Nadeem Ijaz Ahmad, then director general of military intelligence, the report said, citing anonymous sources. It called a later Pakistani inquiry into the decision “a whitewash.”

“Hosing down the crime scene so soon after the blast goes beyond mere incompetence,” the report said. “It is up to the relevant authorities to determine whether this amounts to criminal responsibility.”

The report also criticized Mr. Aziz for deliberately preventing an autopsy, eliminating a central piece of evidence.

The report, in large part, dismisses allegations that Ms. Bhutto’s husband, Asif Ali Zardari, who is now president, had some hand in her killing. It said that it was “patently unrealistic” for the police to have expected Mr. Zardari, who was presented with his wife’s body a full seven hours after her death in a coffin on an air base outside Rawalpindi, to have allowed an autopsy at that time.

Conspiracy theories involving Mr. Zardari “simply had no basis, no evidence to be treated as credible hypotheses,” said Heraldo Muñoz Valenzuela, a Chilean diplomat who was part of the three-member team that conducted the investigation. He spoke at a news conference at the United Nations that was broadcast live on the Internet.

But the report also underscores the continuing powerlessness of President Zardari in pushing for an investigation, and the impunity with which political crimes are committed in Pakistan, a country whose short and turbulent history is punctuated by unexplained killings of prominent leaders.

U.N. Report Finds Faults in Pakistani Bhutto Inquiry - NYTimes.com
 
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And what about the hundreds of innocent people who got killed on the day she was killed and the day she decided to make her grand public appearance in Karachi when she first returned back to Pakistan.


I am not going to say anything bad about a deceased woman, but for all those Benazir/PPP supporters I have to ask them why do they support people who spent billions of dollars on mansions and luxury villas in Dubai, London, and New York while the country they were supposed to lead was almost going bankrupt.


She should've stayed in her mansion in Dubai. She would've been alive today with her children. Pakistan was doing far better before she and her husband came back to Pakistan.
 
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