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Bhutto murder "could have been prevented" with adequate security measures in Pakistan: UN probe panel

2010-04-16 09:03 BJT

Special Report: Pakistan's Bhutto assassinated |

UNITED NATIONS, April 15 (Xinhua) -- The assassination of former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto "could have been prevented" if adequate security measures were taken, according to a highly-anticipated report released here on Thursday by a United Nations investigative commission.

The report was scheduled to be released on March 31 but was postponed until April 15 on the request of Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari, Benazir's widower.

"The federal Pakistani government failed in its primary responsibility to provide effective protection to Ms. Bhutto on her return to Pakistan," the report said, referring to the former government headed by Pervez Musharraf.

"The federal government lacked a comprehensive security plan for Ms. Bhutto, relying instead on provincial authorities, but then failed to issue to them the necessary instructions," the report said, stressing that the security arrangements were " fatally insufficient and ineffective."

Chile's UN Ambassador Heraldo Munoz, who chairs the UN- appointed independent commission, presented the report to the UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon late Thursday afternoon.

Bhutto was killed on Dec. 27, 2007, by a gunshot followed by a suicide bomb attack, as she was leaving after addressing a public meeting in Rawalpindi, a garrison city adjacent to the capital of Islamabad.

Munoz told a press conference here that he would not judge whether the failure to protect Bhutto was "deliberate."

 

Editor: Zhang Pengfei | Source: Xinhua