British team arrives to aid inquiry
Scotland Yard officers will offer Pakistan only forensic and technical help in the Bhutto assassination investigation, President Musharraf says
(Noticiascadadía/LAT).- Scotland Yard
investigators arrived Friday in Pakistan to help
investigate the assassination of Benazir Bhutto,
although the extent of their mandate was
unclear.
The team of British anti-terrorism officers was
dispatched after President Pervez Musharraf, under
intense criticism over the handling of the Bhutto
inquiry, agreed to accept outside assistance.
Musharraf's government initially had rebuffed
international participation of any kind in the
investigation. The former prime minister was killed
Dec. 27 when a gunman and a suicide bomber attacked
her convoy as she left a rally in the city of
Rawalpindi.
At a news conference on the eve of the
investigators' arrival, Musharraf said the British
team would provide forensic and technical
assistance. The Pakistani leader emphasized that
Scotland Yard would not be permitted to engage in
"a wild goose chase and create a political
disturbance."
The investigators made no comment as they landed at
the Islamabad airport. Government officials
speaking on condition of anonymity said they were
expected to begin work this morning.
Much crucial evidence will be unavailable to the
British team. Pakistani police hosed down the crime
scene within 90 minutes of the attack, destroying
many physical traces of the assault. No formal
autopsy was performed. Doctors who treated Bhutto
in the chaotic aftermath of the attack have
recanted initial statements about the nature of the
injuries, apparently gunshot wounds, that killed
her.
Musharraf has denied that any elements in his
government played a role in the attack.
"Nobody is involved from the government side or the
agencies," he told reporters Thursday, referring to
Pakistan's powerful and far-reaching security
apparatus.
Even before a massive suicide bombing targeted her
convoy, after her Oct. 18 homecoming from
self-imposed exile, Bhutto wrote to Musharraf and
told him she believed that elements in the
government and ruling party intended her
harm.
Bhutto, 54, an iconic figure in Pakistani politics,
returned to the country to lead her Pakistan
People's Party in elections that were originally
scheduled for Jan. 8. Amid unrest that followed her
death, the polling was postponed until Feb.
18.
The two major opposition parties, Bhutto's and that
of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, have agreed
to take part in the polling but have said they
believe there will be major vote-rigging by the
ruling party.
It had been feared that the election delay would
spark unrest echoing the riots that broke out after
Bhutto's assassination, which caused tens of
millions of dollars in damage and killed nearly 60
people. But the streets of Pakistan's major cities,
though tense, have been largely calm.











