Bhutto Assassinated
Shot twice, then bomb exploded· Riots across country· Fears over election
The assassination of Pakistani opposition leader Benazir Bhutto last night triggered violent convulsions across the country, casting grave doubts on elections scheduled for January 8 as well as marking a dark finale to a tragedy-strewn life.
Angry scenes erupted in cities across Pakistan where enraged supporters torched businesses and trains, attacked police and blocked roads with burning tyres. Gunfire rang out on the streets of Karachi, the port city where Bhutto, 54, spent much of her life.
Two months after her triumphant return from exile, a lone gunman fired several shots at Bhutto as she left an election rally in Rawalpindi, hitting her in the neck and chest. Seconds later a fireball caused by a suicide bomb engulfed her bulletproof car and killed at least 20 supporters.
The former prime minister was rushed to a nearby hospital where distraught supporters burst through doors, smashed windows and tried to storm into the operating theatre where surgeons struggled to save her life. She was pronounced dead shortly afterwards.
Initial suspicions for the attack fell on Islamist militants who had previously threatened to kill the 54-year-old scion of Pakistan's greatest political dynasty. In October Bhutto survived a suicide attack on her homecoming parade in Karachi that killed 140 people.
The assassination is the climax of an extraordinary chain of crises to have rocked Pakistan over the past nine months as President Pervez Musharraf sought to consolidate his grip on power amid sieges, suicide bombings, high political drama and a frightening surge in Islamist violence.
In a brief televised address Musharraf declared three days of mourning. "This is the work of those terrorists with whom we are engaged in war," he said. "We will not rest until we eliminate these terrorists and root them out."
Analysts said Musharraf may seize on the turmoil to postpone the January polls and possibly reimpose the emergency rule he established on November 3 but lifted shortly before Christmas.
The UN security council held an emergency session to discuss the assassination in the nuclear-armed country, which it described as a threat to international peace and stability. Secretary general Ban Ki-moon said he was "shocked and outraged". In a statement urging nations to cooperate with the Pakistani authorities, the security council "underlined the need to bring perpetrators, organizers, financiers and sponsors of this reprehensible act of terrorism to justice".
Pakistan's alarmed western allies mixed condemnation and tributes with calls for restraint and a continuation of the fragile political process. Gordon Brown hailed Bhutto as "a woman of immense personal courage and bravery". The prime minister said: "She risked everything in her attempt to win democracy in Pakistan. Benazir Bhutto may have been killed by terrorists, but the terrorists must not be allowed to kill democracy in Pakistan."
A tense-looking President George Bush, speaking near his ranch in Crawford, Texas, condemned the killing as a "cowardly act by murderous extremists who are trying to undermine Pakistan's democracy".
In Moscow, President Vladimir Putin sent a telegram to Musharraf saying Bhutto's murder is "a challenge thrown down by forces of terrorism not only to Pakistan but also to the entire international community," Russian news reports said.
The Indian prime minister, Manmohan Singh, said the subcontinent had "lost an outstanding leader". Italian premier Romano Prodi called her "a woman who chose to fight her battle until the end".
The brutal slaying is the latest catastrophe to befall the Bhuttos. Benazir Bhutto's father, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, was deposed by a military dictator in 1977 and hanged two years later. Her two brothers were killed in murky circumstances in following decades.
Bhutto became the Muslim world's first female prime minister in 1988 but a second term of office ended amid corruption allegations in 1996. She returned from exile last October in the garb of a democratic champion but was criticized for holding power-sharing talks with Musharraf.
Yesterday her killer struck as she left Liaqat Bagh, a public park in Rawalpindi where she addressed thousands of supporters at an election rally. As Bhutto was driven out of the park - standing from the sunroof of her bulletproof vehicle wearing her trademark white headscarf and waving to supporters - a young man leapt forward brandishing a gun.
Several gunshots rang out and Bhutto fell back inside. Seconds later a blast rocked the vehicle, showering it with shrapnel. Rescuers found Bhutto lying in pool of blood on the back seat. Senior party official Amin Fahim, who had been sitting beside her, said he heard "between three and five shots".
Amir Qureshi, a bodyguard from Bhutto's youth wing who had been jogging alongside her vehicle, said she was shot first in the neck, then in the head. "This is a black day not only for Pakistan but also the rest of the world," he told the Guardian from his hospital bed, where he was being treated for leg wounds.
Thousands of supporters erupted in paroxysms of anger and sorrow outside the Rawalpindi hospital where Bhutto received emergency treatment. Some smashed through windows and glass doors; others wept and crumpled to the ground. Cries of "Musharraf is a murderer" and "Long Live Bhutto" rang out.
Doctors administered open heart massage but she died from a bullet that severed her spinal cord, one medic said.
Opposition leader Nawaz Sharif, also recently returned from exile, arrived at the hospital and sat by Bhutto's body. "Benazir Bhutto was also my sister, and I will be with you to take the revenge for her death," he said later. "Don't feel alone. I am with you. We will take the revenge on the rulers."
Earlier, a Sharif rally in Rawalpindi had come under fire from a gunman, who killed at least four people and wounded several more. Sharif told the BBC: "I think perhaps none of us is inclined to take up the elections. We'll have to sit down and take a very serious look at the current situation."
Late last night Bhutto's body was flown to her home province of Sindh accompanied by her husband Asif Zardari and their three children, who flew in from Dubai. She may be buried as early as today near her ancestral village in Larkana. Bhutto's resting place will be inside a mausoleum built in recent years to house her father and two brothers. Now, in the latest chapter of Pakistan's most cursed political dynasty, she will join them.
Fatal hours
· Bhutto meets with visiting Afghan president Hamid Karzai at the end of his two-day visit
· Riot police man security checkpoints in Rawalpindi. Hundreds of people forced to pass through metal detectors and undergo body searches before entering the park where the Bhutto rally is to be held
· Bhutto arrives at park, leaves the podium and gets into her car
· She waves to supporters through the sunroof as the car makes its way through the crowds
· Two gunshots heard and Bhutto disappears into the car. She is shot in the head and neck
· Suicide bomber explodes a device, killing at least 20 other people
· Bhutto undergoes emergency operation at Rawalpindi general hospital
· Declared dead at 6.16pm local time
Additional reporting by Waqar Kiani
Angry scenes erupted in cities across Pakistan where enraged supporters torched businesses and trains, attacked police and blocked roads with burning tyres. Gunfire rang out on the streets of Karachi, the port city where Bhutto, 54, spent much of her life.
Two months after her triumphant return from exile, a lone gunman fired several shots at Bhutto as she left an election rally in Rawalpindi, hitting her in the neck and chest. Seconds later a fireball caused by a suicide bomb engulfed her bulletproof car and killed at least 20 supporters.
The former prime minister was rushed to a nearby hospital where distraught supporters burst through doors, smashed windows and tried to storm into the operating theatre where surgeons struggled to save her life. She was pronounced dead shortly afterwards.
Initial suspicions for the attack fell on Islamist militants who had previously threatened to kill the 54-year-old scion of Pakistan's greatest political dynasty. In October Bhutto survived a suicide attack on her homecoming parade in Karachi that killed 140 people.
The assassination is the climax of an extraordinary chain of crises to have rocked Pakistan over the past nine months as President Pervez Musharraf sought to consolidate his grip on power amid sieges, suicide bombings, high political drama and a frightening surge in Islamist violence.
In a brief televised address Musharraf declared three days of mourning. "This is the work of those terrorists with whom we are engaged in war," he said. "We will not rest until we eliminate these terrorists and root them out."
Analysts said Musharraf may seize on the turmoil to postpone the January polls and possibly reimpose the emergency rule he established on November 3 but lifted shortly before Christmas.
The UN security council held an emergency session to discuss the assassination in the nuclear-armed country, which it described as a threat to international peace and stability. Secretary general Ban Ki-moon said he was "shocked and outraged". In a statement urging nations to cooperate with the Pakistani authorities, the security council "underlined the need to bring perpetrators, organizers, financiers and sponsors of this reprehensible act of terrorism to justice".
Pakistan's alarmed western allies mixed condemnation and tributes with calls for restraint and a continuation of the fragile political process. Gordon Brown hailed Bhutto as "a woman of immense personal courage and bravery". The prime minister said: "She risked everything in her attempt to win democracy in Pakistan. Benazir Bhutto may have been killed by terrorists, but the terrorists must not be allowed to kill democracy in Pakistan."
A tense-looking President George Bush, speaking near his ranch in Crawford, Texas, condemned the killing as a "cowardly act by murderous extremists who are trying to undermine Pakistan's democracy".
In Moscow, President Vladimir Putin sent a telegram to Musharraf saying Bhutto's murder is "a challenge thrown down by forces of terrorism not only to Pakistan but also to the entire international community," Russian news reports said.
The Indian prime minister, Manmohan Singh, said the subcontinent had "lost an outstanding leader". Italian premier Romano Prodi called her "a woman who chose to fight her battle until the end".
The brutal slaying is the latest catastrophe to befall the Bhuttos. Benazir Bhutto's father, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, was deposed by a military dictator in 1977 and hanged two years later. Her two brothers were killed in murky circumstances in following decades.
Bhutto became the Muslim world's first female prime minister in 1988 but a second term of office ended amid corruption allegations in 1996. She returned from exile last October in the garb of a democratic champion but was criticized for holding power-sharing talks with Musharraf.
Yesterday her killer struck as she left Liaqat Bagh, a public park in Rawalpindi where she addressed thousands of supporters at an election rally. As Bhutto was driven out of the park - standing from the sunroof of her bulletproof vehicle wearing her trademark white headscarf and waving to supporters - a young man leapt forward brandishing a gun.
Several gunshots rang out and Bhutto fell back inside. Seconds later a blast rocked the vehicle, showering it with shrapnel. Rescuers found Bhutto lying in pool of blood on the back seat. Senior party official Amin Fahim, who had been sitting beside her, said he heard "between three and five shots".
Amir Qureshi, a bodyguard from Bhutto's youth wing who had been jogging alongside her vehicle, said she was shot first in the neck, then in the head. "This is a black day not only for Pakistan but also the rest of the world," he told the Guardian from his hospital bed, where he was being treated for leg wounds.
Thousands of supporters erupted in paroxysms of anger and sorrow outside the Rawalpindi hospital where Bhutto received emergency treatment. Some smashed through windows and glass doors; others wept and crumpled to the ground. Cries of "Musharraf is a murderer" and "Long Live Bhutto" rang out.
Doctors administered open heart massage but she died from a bullet that severed her spinal cord, one medic said.
Opposition leader Nawaz Sharif, also recently returned from exile, arrived at the hospital and sat by Bhutto's body. "Benazir Bhutto was also my sister, and I will be with you to take the revenge for her death," he said later. "Don't feel alone. I am with you. We will take the revenge on the rulers."
Earlier, a Sharif rally in Rawalpindi had come under fire from a gunman, who killed at least four people and wounded several more. Sharif told the BBC: "I think perhaps none of us is inclined to take up the elections. We'll have to sit down and take a very serious look at the current situation."
Late last night Bhutto's body was flown to her home province of Sindh accompanied by her husband Asif Zardari and their three children, who flew in from Dubai. She may be buried as early as today near her ancestral village in Larkana. Bhutto's resting place will be inside a mausoleum built in recent years to house her father and two brothers. Now, in the latest chapter of Pakistan's most cursed political dynasty, she will join them.
Fatal hours
· Bhutto meets with visiting Afghan president Hamid Karzai at the end of his two-day visit
· Riot police man security checkpoints in Rawalpindi. Hundreds of people forced to pass through metal detectors and undergo body searches before entering the park where the Bhutto rally is to be held
· Bhutto arrives at park, leaves the podium and gets into her car
· She waves to supporters through the sunroof as the car makes its way through the crowds
· Two gunshots heard and Bhutto disappears into the car. She is shot in the head and neck
· Suicide bomber explodes a device, killing at least 20 other people
· Bhutto undergoes emergency operation at Rawalpindi general hospital
· Declared dead at 6.16pm local time
Additional reporting by Waqar Kiani

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