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          At least 110 die in blasts near Bhutto in Karachi

          (Agencies)
          Updated: 2007-10-19 06:44

          KARACHI - Two bombs exploded Thursday night near a truck carrying former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto on her return to Pakistan after eight years in exile, killing at least 110 people and wounding 150, an official said. Party workers and police said Bhutto was unhurt.

          A body lies at the scene of explosions which hit former prime minister Benazir Bhutto's convoy in Karachi, October 19, 2007. [Agencies] 

          Associated Press photographer B.K. Bangash at the scene said he saw between 50 and 60 dead or badly injured people. He said some of the bodies were ripped apart.

          An initial small explosion was followed by a huge blast just feet from the front of the truck carrying Bhutto during a procession through Karachi. The blast shattered windows in her vehicle and set a police escort vehicle on fire.

          Those traveling atop the truck with Bhutto climbed down, with one man jumping off while others climbed down.

          Bhutto, who is expected to seek the premiership for an unprecedented third time and partner in ruling Pakistan with President Pervez Musharraf, was safe, said her lawyer, Sen. Babar Awan.

          Police Chief Azhar Farooqi told Dawn News that Bhutto was rushed from the area under contingency plans.

          "She was evacuated very safely and is now in Bilawal House," Farooqi said, referring to Bhutto's residence in Karachi.

          Officials at four hospitals in Karachi reported a total of 51 dead and 150 wounded.

          Dr. Seemi Jamali of Jinnah Hospital said it had 19 dead from the blast, and of the 70 wounded, between 20 and 25 were in critical condition.

          A man who identified himself only as Dr. Faisal of Liaqat National Hospital, reported 30 killed and 80 wounded, many critically.

          Provincial Home Secretary Ghulam Mohammed Mohtaram said the main force of the blast appeared to be taken by the police vehicle.

          Footage from the scene of the blasts showed bodies on the ground, lying motionless, under a mural that read "Long Live Bhutto."

          Pools of blood, broken glass, tires, motorcycles and bits of clothing littered the ground near where the bombs went off. Men moved the injured away from the fires near the blast site. One bystander came upon a body, checked for signs of life, and moved on, presumably to find more who could be saved.

          The injured were carried in stretchers from ambulances and rushed them into a hospital emergency room, while others carried the wounded in their arms. Many of the wounded were covered in blood, and some had their clothes ripped off.

          Medical personnel began to tend to the injured while dozens of people walked through in a daze.

          After the blasts, pickup trucks filled with men rushed away from the scene and others began to run, but many more stayed and milled in between the police vehicle and those of the procession.

          Bhutto had been traveling on a truck equipped with a bulletproof glass cubicle to the tomb of Pakistan's founding father, Mohammed Ali Jinnah, to give a speech. More than 150,000 jubilant supporters had surrounded the convoy carrying Bhutto through Karachi amid massive security.

          Authorities had urged her to use a helicopter to reduce the risk of attack. But Bhutto, hated by radical Islamists because she supports the US-led war on terrorism, brushed off the concerns.

          "I am not scared. I am thinking of my mission," she had told reporters on the plane. "This is a movement for democracy because we are under threat from extremists and militants."

          She was squeezed between other party officials at the front of the truck rather than in the bulletproof cubicle toward the rear. Armed guards escorted the truck.

          Bhutto recently courted controversy in Pakistan by saying that she would cooperate with the American military in targeting Osama bin Laden, and authorities warned that Islamic militants could launch suicide attacks and roadside bombings against her.

          Asked about such threats on Wednesday in Dubai, Bhutto said Islam forbids suicide bombings and attacks on her. "Muslims know if they attack a woman they will burn in hell," she said.

          The government of Sindh province, of which Karachi is the capital, had appealed to Bhutto to abandon plans for a snail-paced grand procession through Karachi, saying it would leave her vulnerable. The government said the main threat was from Taliban and al-Qaida.

          Bhutto had received a rapturous welcome from the tens of thousands of supporters, who craned from tree branches and foot bridges to glimpse her return to Pakistan.

          "I feel very, very emotional coming back to my country," Bhutto said at the airport, as thousands of supporters of her Pakistan People's Party massed outside amid a sea of the party's red, green and black flags.

          When she descended the steps of the commercial jetliner, Bhutto was in tears.

          "I counted the hours, I counted the minutes and the seconds, just to see this land, to see the grass, to see the sky. I feel so emotionally overwhelmed," Bhutto, who wore a white headscarf and clutched prayer beads in her right hand, told the AP.

          "And I hope that I can live up to the great expectations which people here have," she said.

          She said she was fighting for democracy and to help the country defeat the extremism that gave it the reputation as a hotbed of international terrorism.

          "That's not the real image of Pakistan. The people that you see outside are the real image of Pakistan. These are the decent and hardworking middle-classes and working classes of Pakistan who want to be empowered so they can build a moderate, modern nation,"

          Bhutto, 54, fled Pakistan in the face of corruption charges in 1999. It would take a constitutional amendment for her to be prime minister again; Pakistani law bars leaders from seeking a third term.

          The security precautions failed to dampen the spirit of huge crowds.

          Hundreds of buses and other vehicles festooned with billboards welcoming her back were parked bumper-to-bumper along the boulevard from the airport to the city center.

          Supporters including representatives of Pakistan's minority Christian and Hindu communities and Baluch tribesmen with flowing white turbans, walked toward the airport, while groups of men performed traditional dances, beat drums or shook maracas along the way.

          Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz welcomed Bhutto's return, saying it would improve the political and help democracy to "flourish."

          But Musharraf, who had urged Bhutto to delay while he dealt with legal challenges to his continued rule, stayed silent.

          Before boarding her flight from Dubai, Bhutto told reporters that her homecoming felt like a miracle.

          "I hope that, as this miracle is happening, that a miracle will happen for the impoverished and poverty-stricken people of Pakistan who are desperate for change, who want safety, who want security, who want opportunity, who want empowerment and employment," she said.

          Outside Karachi airport, police with batons charged one group of supporters who approached the VIP terminal. But with the crowds swelling, they later relaxed the cordon and let thousands of flag-waving PPP partisans to gather around the building.

          Raza Hussain Shah, a senior police officer at the airport, said 20,000 officers were deployed there and along the route into the city. Officials said police bomb squads and thousands of paramilitary troops and party volunteers also were on hand.

          Bhutto, whose two elected governments between 1988 and 1996 were toppled amid allegations of corruption and mismanagement, hopes to lead her secular, liberal party to victory in parliamentary elections in January.

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