British police say blast killed Bhutto
By Zeeshan Haider
ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - British police investigating the murder of Pakistani opposition leader Benazir Bhutto concluded she was killed by a head injury caused by the impact of a bomb blast, not by a bullet, drawing scepticism from her close aides.
The British High Commission released a summary of their report on Friday, which backed the government's version of the assassination in Rawalpindi city on Dec. 27.
Bhutto's assassination heightened fears of instability in nuclear-armed Pakistan. It also delayed an election that may lead to U.S. ally President Pervez Musharraf's downfall if a hostile parliament emerges from the Feb. 18 vote.
The British report also said Bhutto was probably killed by a lone assassin, who fired shots and detonated explosives, and was not attacked by two people as many Pakistanis had speculated.
"The only tenable cause for the rapidly fatal head injury in this case is that it occurred as the result of impact due to the effects of the bomb-blast," British government pathologist Nathaniel Cary said in the report.
Cary said he suspected Bhutto hit her head against the sunroof, backing an explanation the government had also given.
Scotland Yard's conclusion drew scepticism from members of Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party who were with her when she was killed, and runs counter to what senior hospital officials say they were told privately by doctors who attended to Bhutto.
"We find it difficult to agree with the report about the cause of death, that she was not killed by the assassin's bullet," Sherry Rehman, the PPP spokeswoman who prepared Bhutto's body for burial, told Reuters. Continued...
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