"Am I therefore become your enemy,because I TELL YOU THE TRUTH...?"
(Galatians 4:16)

'Bhutto Not Killed By Assassin's Bullets'

Former Pakistan Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto died from injuries she suffered when hitting her vehicle's sunroof - not from an assassin's bullets, it has been claimed.An Interior Ministry spokesman said a post mortem found no bullets or shrapnel in her body.He was speaking at a press conference at which video was shown of Ms Bhutto's last moments.She is seen waving and chatting happily with supporters from her car as it drives slowly away from an election rally. Three gunshots then ring out, the camera lurches to one side and the picture goes black.It was previously announced Ms Bhutto had died after being hit in the neck and chest.But Interior Ministry spokesman Javed Cheema said all three shots missed her.Instead, she was killed when she ducked back inside her car and hit her head on sunroof lever, fracturing her skull.An aide of Ms Bhutto has dismissed the version of events as a 'pack of lies'.Pakistan's Interior Ministry has also blamed al Qaeda and the Taliban for the 54-year-old's death.Mr Cheema said agents had recorded a phone call in which militant leader Baitullah Mehsud "congratulated his people for carrying out this cowardly act."He also blamed Mehsud for the bomb attempt on Ms Bhutto in Karachi in October that killed more than 140 people.Mr Cheema said other senior politicians also face the threat of attacks by militants, including former prime minister Nawaz Sharif.He announced two inquiries into Ms Bhutto's death, one to be carried out by a high court judge and another by security forces.The press conference was held after Ms Bhutto was laid to rest in a ceremony attended by hundreds of thousands of grief-stricken mourners.She was buried next to her father in the family mausoleum near their home village in Sindh province.The coffin, draped in the flag of Ms Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party, was driven to the mausoleum in a white ambulance.Her supporters crowded around the vehicle, many crying: "Benazir is alive". The mourners were led by Ms Bhutto's husband Asif Ali Zardari and her three children.Ms Bhutto died in hospital in the northern city of Rawalpindi on Thursday after a suicide bomber opened fire at her.The attacker then blew himself up, killing at least 20 of her supporters and injuring dozens of others.Ms Bhutto's murder has sparked violence across Pakistan and thrown next month's elections into doubt.At least 32 people have died in the riots in which banks have been robbed and train stations set on fire.Police have been told to shoot if necessary to maintain law and order amd troops are patrolling the streets of several major cities.Despite the turmoil Pakistan's caretaker Prime Minister Mohammadmian Soomro has said the poll will still go ahead on January 8.President Pervez Musharraf has called for calm and declared three days of national mourning.Gordon Brown has urged him to "stick to the course he has outlined to build democracy and stability in Pakistan".There are fears Pakistan, which has nuclear weapons, could now be plunged into civil war.Many had expected the planned upcoming election would return Ms Bhutto to power and restore democracy.Mr Sharif, the leader of a rival opposition party, has vowed to boycott the poll. He has also called on President Musharraf to stand down.Pope Benedict has joined other world leaders in condemning the assassination. He called it a "brutal terrorist attack".Ms Bhutto's murder came just over two months after she returned to Pakistan from self-imposed exile in Dubai.

As in the days of Noah.....