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Ex-PM Bhutto arrives in Pakistan | Ex-PM Bhutto arrives in Pakistan |
(8 minutes later) | |
Pakistan's ex-Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto has arrived in Karachi after eight years of self-imposed exile. | Pakistan's ex-Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto has arrived in Karachi after eight years of self-imposed exile. |
Ms Bhutto is set to hold power-sharing talks with President Pervez Musharraf, which could see her becoming PM again. | Ms Bhutto is set to hold power-sharing talks with President Pervez Musharraf, which could see her becoming PM again. |
Her return was greeted by about 200,000 supporters who packed the area surrounding the airport and lined the roads leading into the city. | Her return was greeted by about 200,000 supporters who packed the area surrounding the airport and lined the roads leading into the city. |
There is also a huge security presence amid Islamist threats to assassinate both Ms Bhutto and Gen Musharraf. | There is also a huge security presence amid Islamist threats to assassinate both Ms Bhutto and Gen Musharraf. |
The BBC's Owen Bennett-Jones was on board the flight carrying Ms Bhutto from Dubai to Karachi, Pakistan's largest city. | |
The ex-prime minister said that she was "excited and overwhelmed" to be back in Pakistan, our correspondent said. | |
The streets from the airport are packed with peopleEnlarge Image "It just goes to show that miracles can happen," she added. | |
Ms Bhutto was accompanied by about 100 members of her Pakistan People's Party (PPP). | |
At least 200,000 people have turned out to greet her in Karachi, lining the 6km (four mile) route from the airport into the city. | |
The BBC's Syed Shoaib Hasan in Karachi says many people are dressed in the red, black and green colours of Ms Bhutto's PPP party and there is a carnival atmosphere, with music playing and food stalls in place. | |
However, there were some scuffles ahead of Mrs Bhutto's arrival, our correspondent says, as a number of people broke through a police cordon to enter the grounds of the airport. | |
Assassination threat | |
Authorities have tried to persuade Ms Bhutto not to undertake a long procession through Karachi to the tomb of Pakistan's founding father, Mohammed Ali Jinnah, where she plans an address, due to security concerns. | |
But Ms Bhutto said before leaving that she was undeterred: "I do not believe that any true Muslim will make an attack on me because Islam forbids attacks on women and Muslims know that if they attack a woman they will burn in hell." | |
KEY DATES 06 Oct: Presidential polls held 17 Oct: Supreme Court resumes hearing challenges to Musharraf candidacy 18 Oct: Date ex-PM Benazir Bhutto has set for her homecoming 15 Nov: Parliamentary term ends and general election must be held by mid-January In pictures: Karachi prepares Flying into uncertainty | |
About 20,000 troops and police have been deployed in the city to oversee Ms Bhutto's arrival amid threats by Islamist militants to assassinate both her and Gen Musharraf. | |
Some 2,500 paramilitary troops have been deployed around the airport, according to one security spokesman. | |
Javed Iqbal Cheema, a Pakistani interior ministry official, said he was confident about security arrangements. | |
"I'm sure the [provincial] government will take all possible measures to provide foolproof security arrangements which I'm told are already in place," he said. | |
Gen Musharraf had asked Ms Bhutto to delay her return until the Supreme Court decided whether he was eligible to serve as president for another term. | |
Tackling extremists | |
Gen Musharraf easily won a presidential vote on 6 October after opposition deputies in the national and provincial assemblies - which choose the president - either boycotted or abstained from the vote. | |
She is the mediocre daughter of a great leader.In pictures | |
However, the Supreme Court said that he could not be officially declared the winner until it had finished ruling on objections to his candidacy. | |
Ms Bhutto left the country soon after Gen Musharraf seized power in a coup. | |
Washington has backed a power-sharing deal with Gen Musharraf which would see Ms Bhutto becoming prime minister. | |
It has become increasingly concerned over the military's inability to defeat Islamist extremists and Gen Musharraf's rising unpopularity. |