30 January 2008

johnny, brian and god


Brian: I don't believe that. Life can't just come to a stop.
Johnny: All right, I'm not saying that life will end, or the world will end, or the universe will cease to exist, but man will cease to exist. Just like the dinosaurs passed into extinction, the same thing will happen to us.
We're not fucking important.
We're just a crap idea.
Brian: I'm not gonna cease to exist. I'm gonna be here in the future. . . .
Johnny: Do you think the amoeba ever dreamed it would evolve into the frog?
Of course it didn't.
And when that first frog shimmied out of the water and employed its vocal chords in order to attract a mate or to retard a predator, do you think that frog ever imagined that that incipient croak would evolve into all the languages of the world, into all the literature in the world?
Of course it fucking didn't.
And just as that froggy could never possibly have conceived of Shakespeare, so we can never possibly imagine our destiny.
Brian: I know what my destiny is.
Johnny: Yeah, but what you're experiencing, as far as I can gather with all these manifestations of, uh, regression and precognition and transmigratory astral fucking chatterings is just the equivalent of that first primeval grunt, because evolution isn't over. Man isn't the be-all and end-all.
Look, if you take the whole of time, represented by one year we're only in the first few moments of the first of January. There's a long way to go. Only now we're not going to sprout extra limbs and wings and fins, because evolution itself is evolving. . . . One day you'll realize that you've had not just one or two past or future existences, but that you were, and are, everybody and everything that has ever been or will ever be. . . .
You see, the thing is, Brian, that God is a hateful god. Must be. If God is good, then why is there evil in the world? Why is there pain and hate and greed and war? Doesn't make sense. But if God is a nasty bastard, then you can say, "Why is there good in the world? Why is there love and hope and joy?"
Well, let's face it. Good exists in order to be fucked up by evil. The very existence of good enables evil to flourish. Therefore, God is bad. And it doesn't matter how many past or future existences you have, because they're all gonna be riddled with grief and anguish and sickness and death.
You see, Brian, God doesn't love you.
God despises you.
So there's no hope, and mankind is just a component of the device by which the devil creates itself. . . .
You can't make an omelet without cracking a few eggs, and humanity is just a cracked egg.
And the omelet stinks.
Brian: [Sighs] Yeah.

* From Mike Leigh's brilliant film Naked

26 January 2008

obama scores crucial victory in south carolina

Barack Obama is projected to win the South Carolina Democratic primary by a wide margin.
Going into today's primary, many political analysts considered South Carolina a must-win state for Obama, who finished second to Hillary Clinton in New Hampshire and Nevada.
Clinton is projected to finish second and John Edwards a distant third.

gibson apologizes for ledger comments

On the Thursday edition of "The Big Story with John Gibson and Heather Nauert," Fox News clown John Gibson apologized for his tasteless comments about Heath Ledger's death.

24 January 2008

gibson on the late ledger: "there's no point in passing up a good joke

Gibson Acknowledges Mocking Ledger's Death: "There's No Point in Passing up a Good Joke"

Summary: John Gibson responded to criticism of his comments the previous day mocking the death of actor Heath Ledger, and said "Did I mock him?" After Gibson's producer pointed out that Gibson had in fact mocked Ledger's death, Gibson replied, laughing, "Oh, that. Well," later adding, "There's no point in passing up a good joke."

From the January 23 broadcast of Fox News Radio's The John Gibson Show:

GIBSON: There is a war on Gibson, and even though Gibson's always right, there is a war.

[...]

GIBSON: Just to give you a heads-up about it, I did this -- an hour yesterday on Heath Ledger on my TV show 'cause he, like, was still warm. I got an email, Angry Rich, just moments ago from somebody who said that I was just a horrible, low-life, awful person for mocking the death. [unintelligible] News!

ANGRY RICH: John, the start of yesterday's show is now prominently featured on Think Progress, the George Soros operation. Yes. It says, "John Gibson mocks 'weirdo' Heath Ledger's death."

GIBSON: Did I mock him?

ANGRY RICH: He found out how to "quit you," quote-unquote.

GIBSON: Oh that [laughter]. Well --

ANGRY RICH: A little satire.

GIBSON: Yeah, it was little Brokeback Mountain joke.

ANGRY RICH: You feel bad about it. C'mon.

GIBSON: No. I mean, I feel bad about his death, but that's --

ANGRY RICH: It's horrible.

AUDIO CLIP (from Brokeback Mountain): I wish I knew how to quit you.

GIBSON: There's no point in passing up a good joke. I mean, how many months did we live off that line, Brokeback Mountain?

AUDIO CLIP (from Brokeback Mountain): I wish I knew how to quit you.

ANGRY RICH: Several.

GIBSON: I mean, it went on for months and months and months. I'm not giving that up.

ANGRY RICH: The comments are unfortunate.

GIBSON: Oh are they? Are they going after me over it?

ANGRY RICH: Oh, yeah.

GIBSON: OK. Well it's the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune, but --

ANGRY RICH: You're a closet homosexual. That's the first --

GIBSON: I am?

ANGRY RICH: Apparently.

GIBSON: Well, I'm still breathing. There's a difference right there.

ANGRY RICH: I guess.

GIBSON: Christine, it took you so long to get that? I mean, I was, like, counting the seconds there.

ANGRY RICH: "Gibson will be whining tomorrow that his words were taken out of context."

GIBSON: No. I meant them, whatever they were. I don't remember what they were, but whatever they were, I meant them.

More on that a little bit later.

[...]

GIBSON: Jerry, Missouri. What, Jerry?

JERRY: Well, I'm sorry to hear that you have a head cold. You know, when I tuned in just a few minutes ago on XM and I heard you talking, you know, I thought it was Hillary giving one of her Southern speeches.

GIBSON: Y'all fixing to drive on down the road there, Jerry? And sidle up to a plate of beans and a few [unintelligible]?

SEN. HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON (D-NY) [audio clip]: I don't feel no ways tired. I've come too far from where I started from.

GIBSON: You are cruel, cruel, Jerry. Here I am, in trouble for mocking the death of Heath Ledger, snorting heroin, as he was, along with the Xanax and the Ambien, and you mock me.

[...]

GIBSON: Well, it is John Gibson. Be sure to stay tuned for the next hour, 'cause we're going to go into this thing of me getting attacked. I'm just reading this -- just by way of piquing your interest. It says here on the Think Progress deal that I called Heath Ledger a weirdo. Hm. I don't -- I don't remember saying that. I might have. I suppose he was a little weird to keep to himself. Although, I keep to myself.

ANGRY RICH: So do I.

GIBSON: I suppose he was a little weird to be so in love with his drugs that it caused his -- the mother of his child to kick him out of his house. Still wondering about that rolled-up $20 bill with the white powdery substance on it, but you know. I guess it's sort of normal and probably what Think Progress thinks is normal, is if you're somewhere between 20 and 35, you probably do heroin once in a while. You know, just sniff a little for the heck of it. I might think that's weird. Eric in Los Angeles.

CALLER: Hey, John.

GIBSON: How are 'ya?

CALLER: Pretty good. Hey, I'm just curious where you actually got your information on any white powder and-or the fact that it was heroin, 'cause there's nothing out there yet that states that.

GIBSON: Well, yeah, there is, you just gotta read a little more.

CALLER: OK, where is it?

GIBSON: Well, CBS News in New York reported cops --

CALLER: There's no toxicology reports that have come back from that yet.

GIBSON: We're not talking about toxicology reports, Eric. Wait, look, the Daily Mail in London, which keeps up on these things, says that a source told them that he'd had a heroin problem. And that -- listen -- and that he had been in rehab recently. In addition, two stations here reporting that there had was a mysterious, or traces of a mysterious powder that they're testing. Let's hope it's not true, let's hope that he needed to take his Ambien by rolling up a $20 bill and snorting it.

CALLER: You know, I just think it shows really bad taste on your part, you know, which, you know, he wasn't even, he wasn't even, he was still warm when you started, you know, ripping on him yesterday.

GIBSON: No, he wasn't still warm but his body was still there. I'm not ripping on him. I mean, look, here's an interesting thing. Did you notice over the weekend that the AP had prepared a obituary on Britney Spears? And that right now in London the newspapers are making the obituaries of Amy Winehouse? And, you know, nobody knew about Heath Ledger. He was smart enough to keep his life private. He wasn't out in the clubs, stagging around, falling over. I mean, I feel bad for him. He shouldn't have been doing this stuff. Somebody should have warned him. A whole bunch of Ambien, a whole bunch of Xanax, and a whole bunch of whatever it was, and if he was involved in snorting heroin, it was going to depress his central nervous system and he was going to stop breathing. Now, you tell me, why is it millionaire 28-year-olds don't know that? And you tell me, why is it one of the great singers right now -- Amy Winehouse, she is a great singer -- she's lighting up a crack pipe on the air, on video, right in front of people --

[...]

GIBSON: It is John Gibson. I am -- I'm under constant attack these days, because -- partially because of the sound of my voice, has really crapped out because of a cold. ThinkProgress.org, the George Soros organization, is attacking me for calling Heath Ledger a weirdo in discussing his death yesterday. At first, I thought, oh they're lying, I couldn't have said that. And then I listened to the tape, and I realized I did say that. And here's the context. There was a interview that Heath Ledger did where a reporter asked him, just recently, about his daughter -- he's got a 2-year-old daughter, Matilda, that he apparently loved very much -- and which he said this:

[begin audio clip]

LEDGER: [inaudible] changed my life. Well, I don't know. I mean, God, where do you start? I mean --

UNIDENTIFIED REPORTER: Did it change the way you work, you think?

LEDGER: No, I guess you're forced into kind of respecting yourself more. You learn more about yourself through your child, I guess. And I think you also look at death differently. Like -- it's like a Catch-22. Like, I feel good about dying now, because I feel like I'm alive in her, you know, but at the same time, you don't want to die because you want to be around for the rest of her life. It's kind of like --

[end audio clip]

GIBSON: Now, I reacted to the fact that he said, you know, having a child changed my attitude about death. And I thought, changed your attitude about death? I'm sure it changed your attitude about life, but who at his age and his success and all of that is thinking about death? And I said:

[begin audio clip]

GIBSON: Listen, November '07, he was talking about, and this is a 28-year-old guy, saying, "Well, you know, it's given me a whole different thought about death." What? You're 28 years old, and you're thinking about death? Give me a break.

CHRISTINE: Maybe he was a deep thinker.

GIBSON: Maybe he was a weirdo.

[end audio clip]

GIBSON: [clears throat] Christine?

CHRISTINE: Yeah?

GIBSON: Well, upon reflection, should I be attacked for that remark?

CHRISTINE: You called him a weirdo.

GIBSON: Well, I think it is weird that this guy -- look, evidently, and I don't know whether it's because he has to think about death playing things like the Joker. And apparently, this new movie in which he plays the Joker, he's just fabulous.

LEDGER (audio clip as the Joker from The Dark Knight): You can change things. Forever. There's no going back. See, to them, you're just a freak. Like me.

GIBSON: Like me. Like me! And I must tell you, the fact that I said what I said yesterday on this radio program, was not the strangest bit of reporting that went on on Heath Ledger's death yesterday. This was on MSNBC:

COURTNEY HAZLETT [MSNBC gossip reporter, audio clip]: Chris, I have to say, in a lot of ways, this reminds me we've almost had a dress rehearsal for this almost with Owen Wilson and --

GIBSON: Wow!

HAZLETT [audio clip]: -- thankfully, that turned out a lot differently. But it's hard to look at this --

GIBSON: Whoa.

HAZLETT [audio clip]: -- and not feel reminded --

GIBSON: Whoa.

HAZLETT [audio clip]: -- of that from earlier.

GIBSON: Whoa. OK. Now, why is Truth -- ThinkProgress.org not attacking the MSNBC lady for saying, well, Owen Wilson's suicide, that was a dress rehearsal for what we saw with Heath.

ANGRY RICH: Bathtub Boy [Keith Olbermann] uses their site for his show every night.

GIBSON: Oh, right. He draws his script from that site.

ANGRY RICH: Right.

GIBSON: And from Media Matters, the other George Soros-funded operation.

ANGRY RICH: That's right.

GIBSON: Well, all right, then if you weren't going to attack MSNBC, you could attack Larry King.

[begin audio clip]

KING: His parents were divorced, Pat. Are they living?

GIBSON [talking over audio clip]: Are they living?

PAT O'BRIEN (host of The Insider): I don't know the answer to that, Larry. I'm just going to have to tell you I don't know the answer to that.

KING: Ben, do you know?

BEN WIDDICOMBE (New York Daily News columnist): Honestly, I don't know. I do know that his family has released a statement insisting that he has not committed suicide, that that is not in his nature. The exact family members that issued that statement, I am not clear on.

KING: Do you know, A.J.?

A.J. HAMMER (host of Showbiz Tonight): I don't have that exact information, Larry.

KING: Do you know, Howard?

HOWARD BRAGMAN (publicist): I don't know. I think his parents are living, though.

KING: Does he have brothers and sisters?

BRAGMAN: I think he had a sister who helped get him into acting when his parents got divorced when he was about 10 years old. Supposedly his sister tried to put him into acting so he could really have a cathartic moment.

KING: Was his fiancée an actress?

BRAGMAN: Oh, yes. She was also in Brokeback Mountain. That's where they met, on the set. Michelle --

KING: Oh, she played his wife.

BRAGMAN: Exactly.

KING: Thank you all very much.

[end audio clip]

GIBSON: Talk about a moron. Larry, ask me, is his -- are his parents living? Yeah, Larry, in fact, they spoke.

KIM LEGDER (father) [audio clip]: We, Heath's family, confirm the very tragic, untimely, and accidental passing of our dearly loved son, brother, and doting father of Matilda. He was found peacefully asleep in his New York apartment by his housekeeper at 3:30 U.S. time.

GIBSON: Larry, that's his father. He's very much living. Who does produce Larry King's show now?

ANGRY RICH: That tape was out there well before that show aired.

GIBSON: I could see him asking one person. You know, but by then, the producer's supposed to open the mic, you know, the [inaudible], talk in his ear and say, "Larry, don't go there." He asks five more people.

All right, let me go now to Michael Hungen of TMZ.com. He's been doing a lot of work on this. So Michael, I've gotten a lot -- attacked on this radio program over the last 24 hours, for suggesting there might have been some other drug than a legal prescription drug involved in Heath Ledger's death. Now, there was a rolled-up $20 bill found in his apartment. It was confirmed by New York City Police Commissioner Ray Kelly. And there have been reports from other media outlets that there was some sort of powdery residue on that $20 bill. Know anything about that?

HUNGEN: Yeah, John, they just -- actually, this news just broke, literally. They are saying the $20 was clean. So, no, you know, no illegal substance, I guess, coming out of that. CBS is reporting today that there were packets of drugs found in the apartment, which, I'm assuming now that that can't be true, if, you know, this -- obviously there was nothing on the $20 bill. So that's the latest coming out of the NYPD.

GIBSON: Why would anybody be rolling up $20 bills if not to snort powdered drugs?

HUNGEN: Your guess is a good as mine. Maybe he was looking to get some money rolls? I'm not really sure. They're saying, though, that it's clean. I don't know if they're going to keep testing or look at other things and also, you know, confirm what CBS reported, but I'm assuming that that also is not true.

GIBSON: Michael, the other thing is that that's not the only report on which we based this notion. There was a Daily Mail, which is a newspaper in Britain, talking about a source of theirs, a friend of Ledger's said he did have a heroin problem at one point and had gone into rehab. Do we know anything beyond the state of rumor about drug use involving drugs that are not legal?

HUNGEN: Yeah, I mean, we talked to sources close to him yesterday who confirm with us that he was struggling for a long time with a drug abuse problem, and he -- they told us he did not go to rehab. They also told us that he had been clean for a year, you know, and it could have been part of the reason that he and Michelle Williams got separated last year, you know, that she was his fiancé. But what we were told from his sources close to him that he had been clean for a long time. Now, again, we won't know until the toxicology reports come back if that's completely true anymore. But that'll going to be an interesting turn to this whole story.

GIBSON: Well, the whole deal with Michelle Williams, that's his actress girlfriend, mother of his child, young Matilda, was that they were very happily ensconced, they bought a townhouse in Brooklyn in one of those neighborhoods that's, you know, being gentrified, and suddenly there's problems and he's out of the house, and the story so far has been that she could not take his continued dalliances with drugs.

[...]

GIBSON: News bulletin as we go off the air. That rolled up $20 bill in Heath Ledger's house, clean. No drug residue. Just want to be on the record here, all the facts, keeping you quite up to date on this burgeoning controversy surrounding yours truly. Tune in tomorrow, I may have more voice and I may be in more trouble if things go right.



* From mediamatters.org (source address: http://mediamatters.org/items/200801240008)

right-wing talk show host mocks ledger's death

Fox News' John Gibson Mocks ‘Weirdo’ Heath Ledger’s Death: ‘He Found Out How To Quit You’

Opening his radio show with funeral music yesterday, Fox News host John Gibson callously mocked the death of actor Heath Ledger, calling him a “weirdo” with a “serious drug problem.”

Playing an audio clip of the iconic quote, “I wish I knew how to quit you” from Ledger’s gay romance movie Brokeback Mountain, Gibson disdainfully quipped, “Well, he found out how to quit you.” Laughing, Gibson then played another clip from Brokeback Mountain in which Ledger said, “We’re dead,” followed by his own, mocking “We’re dead” before playing the clip again.

Throughout the course of the show, Gibson continued to bring up Ledger’s death while discussing current events, jokingly claiming that current events may have caused him to commit suicide.

On yesterday’s drop in the stock market:

GIBSON: Maybe he had a serious position in the market.

TOM SULLIVAN: And possibly today, he looked at the window and said…

GIBSON: “Oh my God.”

SULLIVAN: His name’s not Keith Bledger, right?

GIBSON: He was depressed about yesterday’s downturn in the world stock markets.

On the Democratic debate in South Carolina:

GIBSON: Apparently Heath Ledger was suicidal and his friends saw it coming. I think he watched the Clinton-Obama debate last night. I think he was an Edwards guy, cause he saw his Edwards guy was just completely irrelevant.

In reality, New York City Police spokesman Paul J. Browne told the New York Times that there was “no obvious indication of suicide.”

You stay classy, John Gibson.

UPDATE: In 2006, when Brokeback Mountain was released, Gibson repeatedly made fun of the film, calling it “a gay agenda movie.”

UPDATE II: Newshounds is encouraging readers to complain to Fox News about Gibson’s comments. Send all comments to comments@foxnews.com

* from ThinkProgress.com -- Visit their LINK to hear some of Gibson's despicable comments

20 January 2008

third tynes a charm; the giants are going to glendale












Giants Advance to Super Bowl XLII!

By Michael Eisen, Giants.com

January 20, 2008

GREEN BAY –The great road show in NFL history will play its final act in Super Bowl XLII.

The Giants continued their remarkable postseason run Sunday by twice coming from behind to defeat the Green Bay Packers in overtime, 23-20, in the NFC Championship Game in frigid Lambeau Field.

The Giants, 13-6, improved to 4-0 in conference championship games and advanced to their first Super Bowl since 2000. They will face the AFC Champion New England Patriots on Feb. 3 in Glendale, Ariz. The Giants lost to the Patriots, 38-35, in the regular season finale on Dec. 29.

K Lawrence Tynes missed the game-winning 36-yard field goal at the end of regulation but kicked the game-winner from 47-yards out in overtime!

The field goal was set up by Corey Webster's interception.

Once again, the Giants proved they are at home on the road. They extended their own record by winning their 10th consecutive road game and they became the first team in history to win 10 games as visitors in one season.

The Giants also became the third team in history to advance to the Super Bowl by winning three road games, joining the 1985 Patriots and 2005 Pittsburgh Steelers.

* From Giants.com (http://www.giants.com/news/eisen/story.asp?story_id=26618)

10 January 2008

after loss in new hampshire, obama eyes south carolina

Obama, Clinton Fight for South Carolina

(CNN) Democratic rivals Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama are locked in an intense battle to win South Carolina voters.

Sen. Barack Obama won in Iowa, but came in second in New Hampshire.

So far, the score is even between the two -- Clinton narrowly edged out Obama in New Hampshire, and Obama finished first in Iowa.

In South Carolina, the two are in a tight race heading into the state's January 26 Democratic primary.

Key to winning South Carolina is winning its African-Americans, who make up about 50 percent of the state's Democratic primary voters.

"If a Democratic candidate is going to make headway in the Deep South -- and this being a bellwether Deep South state -- you need the black vote to do that," said Todd Shaw, assistant professor of political science at the University of South Carolina.

The state's black population has been divided between loyalty to the Clintons, longtime allies of the black community, and Obama, the newcomer.

But the latest polls suggest support could be shifting. In July, 52 percent of black Democratic primary voters said they favored Clinton, compared to Obama's 33 percent. In December, Obama's support had risen to 45 percent while Clinton's dropped to 46.

Campaigners for the New York senator hope the momentum from her New Hampshire win will carry her through South Carolina.

"We are ready. New Hampshire of course gave us a springboard to take us right into January 26," said Kelly Adams, Clinton's South Carolina campaign director.

A few blocks away from Clinton's Columbia headquarters, volunteers for Obama spread the Illinois senator's message of change to anyone who will listen.

"People are just fired up. They're ready to make this state the next win," said Obama adviser Rick Wade.

Obama received a big boost in South Carolina on Thursday when Sen. John Kerry, the 2004 Democratic presidential candidate four years ago, announced he's endorsing Obama.

Obama supporter Damon Hardy said some blacks are still waffling because they are unsure of his long-term chances.

"It's like they want Obama to win, but they don't want their vote to be wasted on someone who they don't think is going to win. They don't really think Obama has a chance. So, they're voting Hillary Clinton because of her experience," he said.

But the other half of the equation can't be ignored. The white Democratic vote makes up the other 50 percent of the vote.

"You see something with younger, white voters and older, more established high income white voters favoring Obama. Clinton does well, of course, among women," said Ray Chapman, political editor of The State.

Former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards, while a distant third, is still in the race.

The South Carolina native seems to be resonating with working-class voters who have suffered in the hard-hit textile industry.

At a campaign stop in Clemson, he used his roots to bolster his appeal.

"I was born here. I know what your lives are like. I do not have to read this in a book. I know it firsthand," he said.

When Edwards took South Carolina in the 2004 primary, he captured 37 percent of the black vote.

* From CNN's Dan Lothian

Barack Obama Logo

04 January 2008

obama notches big win in iowa caucuses

Huckabee, Obama Enjoy Huge Night in Iowa

DES MOINES, Iowa (CNN) -- Barack Obama and Mike Huckabee have claimed victories in Iowa's first-in-the-nation caucuses.

With all Democratic precincts reporting, Obama had the support of 38 percent of voters, compared to 30 percent for John Edwards and 29 percent for Hillary Clinton. "The numbers tell us this was a debate between change and experience, and change won," said CNN political analyst Bill Schneider.

Iowa delivered fatal blows to the campaigns of Sen. Chris Dodd of Connecticut and Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware. Both have decided to abandon their White House runs.

New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, who finished fourth, said his campaign plans to "take the fight to New Hampshire."

New Hampshire holds the nation's first primary Tuesday. Clinton and Obama are in a statistical dead heat in New Hampshire, according to the latest CNN/WMUR poll.

On the GOP side, Sen. John McCain of Arizona, whose campaign was languishing six months ago, and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney are now tied for first place in New Hampshire, according to the poll, which was released Wednesday.

McCain left Iowa before caucus night even began. He was already in New Hampshire by Thursday afternoon, trying to get a jump on his rivals. For the winners of both party's caucuses in Iowa, it's an age revolt for Democrats versus a religious revolt for Republicans, Schneider said.

Among Democrats, Obama took 57 percent of the under-30 vote, according to CNN's analysis of entrance polls. Speaking to supporters, Obama called the night a "defining moment in history."

"You came together as Democrats, Republicans and independents to stand up and say that we are one nation, we are one people and our time for change has come."

Huckabee's victory can be attributed to his overwhelming support among evangelical voters and women, the polls indicate.

With 92 percent of Republican precincts reporting, Huckabee, former governor of Arkansas, had the support of 34 percent of voters, compared to 25 percent for Romney.

Fred Thompson had 13 percent, McCain had 13 percent and Ron Paul had 10 percent.

Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who has turned the focus of his campaign to the February 5 "Super Tuesday" primaries, trailed with 4 percent.

"We've paid a lot of attention to states that some other candidates haven't paid a lot of attention to," Giuliani said, adding, "Time will tell what the best strategy is."

Huckabee was vastly outspent by Romney, who poured millions of dollars into a sophisticated get-out-the-vote operation.

"People really are more important than the purse, and what a great lesson for America to learn," Huckabee said in thanking his supporters.

For most of 2007, Huckabee languished in the single digits in the polls and had very little success raising money. But his momentum picked up in the final six weeks of the year when social conservatives -- an important voting bloc in Iowa -- began to move his way.

"We won the silver ... You win the silver in one event. It doesn't mean you're not going to come back and win the gold in the final event, and that we are going to do," Romney said.

Clinton, speaking with 96 percent of the vote in, portrayed herself as the candidate who could bring about the change the voters want. "I am so ready for the rest of this campaign, and I am so ready to lead," she said.

Clinton had worked to convince Iowa caucus-goers she has the experience to enact change, while Edwards and Obama preached that she is too much of a Washington insider to bring change to the nation's capital.

Edwards, in a tight race for second, said Iowa's results show that "the status quo lost and change won."

"Now we move on ... to determine who is best suited to bring about the changes this country so desperately needs," he said.

McCain, who had largely abandoned Iowa to focus on the New Hampshire primary, said, "The lessons of tonight's election in Iowa are that one, you can't buy an election in Iowa; and two, that negative campaigns don't work."

With such a close race on both sides, voter turnout was key. The Iowa Democratic Party reported seeing record turnout. The party said there were at least 227,000 caucus attendees.

The Iowa GOP projected that 120,000 people took part in the Republican caucuses. The Iowa Democratic Party said 124,000 people participated in the 2004 caucuses, while the Republican Party of Iowa estimated that 87,000 people took part in the 2000 caucuses. (President Bush ran unchallenged for a second term in 2004.)

Caucus-goer Kathy Barger, inside a Democratic caucus site in Walnut, Iowa, said the room she was in was packed to the brim with a line out the door.

"I don't know how they are going to be able to fit everybody in the room, much less count the votes," she said. "There are bodies in every available space in the room."

The White House hopefuls campaigned down to the wire in Iowa, determined to reach as many people as possible before the 1,781 caucuses that started at 7 p.m.
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Iowa Democrats, unlike Republicans, use a more complicated system to determine a candidate's viability. Republican caucus-goers are asked for their support for a candidate only one time during the event. Democrats are asked twice: an initial question of support, and a second if their first-choice candidate does not reach a 15 percent threshold to achieve viability.

Among Republican candidates, Thompson, a former senator from Tennessee, and Rep. Duncan Hunter of California needed strong showings in Iowa to keep their campaigns going, while Paul, a representative from Texas, is likely to ride his surge of popularity through February 5 -- "Super Tuesday," when 24 states hold their primaries -- no matter where he places in the early contests.

*From CNN.com
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
More Impressive Numbers for Obama

Some facts about last night's victory in Iowa
by Sam Graham-FelsenFriday, January 04, 2008 at 01:38 PM

Last night, Barack Obama made history in Iowa with a dramatic and decisive victory. He won by bringing an unprecedented number of voters into the process, including thousands of Republicans and Independents who registered as Democrats in order to support Obama.

The entrance polls show just how dominating Obama’s win was and dispel some myths about his candidacy:

* Obama beat Clinton among women 35% to 30%
* Obama beat Edwards among voters in union households 30%-24%
* Obama beat Clinton and Edwards among voters of almost every income level (Obama and Clinton tied among voters who make $15-30,000)
* As many voters age 17-29 as voters 65 and older participated last night -- in previous years senior participation has been 5-times greater than younger voters.
* Obama beat Edwards and Clinton among voters who want change (51%-20%-19%)
* Despite countless attacks and hundreds of thousands of dollars in negative mail, TV, and radio, Obama beat Clinton and Edwards (34%-30%-27%) among voters who say health care is the most important issue
* Obama won among those who said the economy was the most important issue (36%-26%-26%)
* Obama won over Clinton and Edwards (35%-26%-17%) among those who said Iraq was the most important issue
* Won across the ideological spectrum – winning among liberals, moderates and conservatives
* Won among high income and lower income voters among voters with household income below $50,000 (34%-32%-19%) and among those over $50,000 (41%-19%-28%)
* Also won among the 82% of voters who said Pakistan was “very or somewhat important”

* From ObamaBlog at barackobama.com

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01 January 2008

bhutto updates

Bhutto's 19-year-old Son Chosen as Eventual Party Chief

KARACHI, Pakistan, Dec. 30 -- Pakistan's largest and most storied political party chose Sunday to continue its dynastic traditions, anointing the 19-year-old son of slain former prime minister Benazir Bhutto to be her ultimate successor but picking her husband to lead for now.

The selections mean that the Pakistan People's Party, which casts itself as the voice of democracy in Pakistan, will stay in family hands for a third generation.

Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, who had largely been shielded from the spotlight by his mother and has not lived in Pakistan since he was a young boy, will lead the party when he finishes his studies at Oxford University.

Speaking briefly but forcefully at a news conference in the Bhutto family's ancestral home, he said he would strive to honor his mother's legacy. "The party's long and historic struggle will continue with renewed vigor," he said. "My mother always said democracy is the best revenge."

Bhutto's husband, Asif Ali Zardari, whose reputation has long been tainted by corruption charges, will run the party for at least the next several years. He said Sunday that the succession strategy reflected the wishes of his wife, who died in a gun-and-bomb attack at a rally Thursday afternoon.

The party's new leaders -- neither of whom had been a major player in Pakistani politics -- take over at an especially turbulent time for the country, with elections on the horizon and President Pervez Musharraf clinging to power amid widespread unrest.

Asif Zardari quickly announced that the party will compete in the parliamentary vote scheduled for Jan. 8. Another opposition party, led by former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, indicated it will do the same.

But Musharraf allies strongly hinted that the election would be postponed, possibly for months. "Delaying the election is very much in the cards," said Tariq Azim Khan, information secretary for the major pro-Musharraf party. "If you ask me personally if I would go ahead, I would say it would be unfair to go out and campaign in these sad times."

Although the Bush administration pressed Pakistani leaders last week to keep to the election schedule, the State Department said Sunday that it had no objections to a slight postponement.

"If the people on the ground think this is not the time for an election, that is fine," said spokesman Robert McInturff. "But we would want to see an alternative date. We do not want to see an indefinite delay."

Bhutto's killing Thursday was followed by unrest across the country, as rioting broke out in major cities as well as small villages. The atmosphere remained tense Sunday, with army deployments in several key areas, but the violence eased. Still, Bhutto's legions of supporters continued to blame Musharraf for her death.

Zardari called Sunday for the United Nations to lead an international inquiry into his wife's killing, while conceding that he had declined to give Pakistani officials permission to conduct an autopsy. "Their forensic reports are useless," he said angrily, calling the suggestion of an autopsy "an insult to my wife, to the sister of the nation, to the mother of the nation."

The Bhuttos are often compared to the Kennedys because of their tendency toward charismatic leaders who meet tragic ends. Benazir Bhutto's father, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, himself a former prime minister, was hanged in 1979 by the military dictator who overthrew him. Her two brothers died in mysterious and violent circumstances.

The young man representing the newest generation of Bhuttos -- who added the famous name for the first time Sunday -- indicated he is acutely aware of that record, saying the chairmanship of the Pakistan People's Party is a position "that often is occupied by martyrs."

Nonetheless, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari said he planned to return to Pakistan after he graduates from Oxford "to lead the party as my mother wanted me to."

Asif Zardari, meanwhile, left no doubt Sunday that he will be in charge in the interim. He pointedly asked reporters not to address questions to his son, and he lashed out at Musharraf's allies, calling them "the killer party."

Zardari, who wed Benazir Bhutto in an arranged marriage in 1987, is a controversial choice to lead the party, and some insiders worry it could fracture. During his wife's two terms as prime minister in the late 1980s and 1990s, he was known as "Mr. 10 Percent" for his reputation for taking money off the top of government deals. He served an extended jail sentence under Musharraf that stemmed from the alleged corruption.

"Zardari is not very much liked in the party. He goes for big hotels, world's best addresses. He wants to live like a prince abroad," said Rafiq Safi, a longtime party activist.

Zardari also has many critics in Western capitals, including Washington, which could further complicate U.S. hopes that Musharraf and the PPP might form a coalition that would unify moderate forces in Pakistan against extremism. "The U.S. is not going to be excited about working with Zardari," said Daniel Markey, senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.

But the pressure to keep the party's leadership in family hands was intense, reflecting the unorthodox nature of the PPP as a party for the impoverished masses that is largely run by a collection of wealthy landlords -- the Bhutto family being by far the most prominent.

For true believers in the magic of the Bhutto name, people who are not members of the clan are ineligible to lead. Even Zardari is viewed with suspicion because he came to the family through marriage, not blood.

"There's something wrong with the region," said former party official Makhdoom Khaleeq Zaman, referring to the South Asian tendency for political dynasties. "It's not very democratic."

While Benazir Bhutto was groomed to lead the party by her father, it is unclear whether her son went through the same training.

His birth in 1988 -- on the eve of elections that Bhutto won, making her the first female prime minister of a Muslim nation -- generated headlines around the world. But after that, she took great pains to guard his privacy. He largely grew up in exile in London and Dubai, and little is known about him outside the family.

In her autobiography, Bhutto described the birth of her first child, calling him "the most celebrated and politically controversial baby in the history of Pakistan."

"There were congratulatory gunshots being fired outside the hospital, the beating of drums" and cries of "Long live Bhutto," she wrote.

On Sunday, when Bilawal Bhutto Zardari was reintroduced to the world, dozens of emotional party activists repeated that cheer and added a new one: "Bilawal, move forward! We are with you."

* Article from washingtonpost.com


Missing Evidence from Bhutto's Murder

With rumors of government complicity in Benazir Bhutto's assassination rife throughout Pakistan, the country's stability may depend on the absolute transparency of the investigation into the murder. But a constantly evolving and sometimes contradictory explanation of the events by Pakistani investigators has only clouded the issue. Meanwhile, her husband and her supporters are asking for a United Nations-led inquiry into her death, something Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf is unlikely to accede to. But even if Musharraf were to agree, there is very little for international forensics experts to investigate.

Within hours of the attack in the garrison town of Rawalpindi some 10 miles from the capital, authorities had already hosed down the streets. Pools of blood, along with possible evidence such as bullet casings, DNA samples from the bomber and tracks had been washed away. Retired Lieutenant General Hamid Gul, the former director general of Pakistani Intelligence, said he was shocked to see people cleaning up the debris so soon after the assassination. "It's a crime scene, and they're washing away all the evidence! We need to be asking why the hell was this thing done." One of the few pieces of evidence from the crime scene that remains is amateur footage showing a clean-cut man in a black vest brandishing what appears to be a gun. Behind him stands another man, a white scarf wrapped around his head. It is thought that he might have been the suicide bomber.

The situation had already been muddied by contradictory versions of how Bhutto died. Initial health official reports stated that Bhutto had been shot twice before a suicide bomber detonated himself seconds later. But by Saturday, the government reversed track. Bhutto had been shot at, said Interior Ministry spokesman Javed Iqbal Cheema, but the shooter missed. The force of the explosion knocked Bhutto, who had been waving at the crowds from her vehicle's sunroof, backwards. She hit her head on a protruding lever, and succumbed to the fractures to her skull. Cheema presented X rays to support his claim, but witnesses and close friends who rushed Bhutto to the hospital say that there was no doubt she had been shot.

Doctors who had attended Bhutto immediately after the attack initially said that she died of gunshot wounds, but over the weekend they released new findings in line with the Interior Ministry's claim that the official cause of death was head wounds sustained when Bhutto fell. The reversal has many people suspecting government interference. Says Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan, an opposition member of the National Assembly and a former petroleum minister: "The government says it was the work of terrorists and they say someone has claimed responsibility. What I don't understand is why they keep changing the story of how Bhutto died? Why do that? These summersaults make everything look suspicious."

Khan says he is naturally skeptical of talk that the government could be behind the assassination but says that their inept handling of the investigation only adds to the rumors. The idea that Bhutto died when her head hit a lever as she was pushed down into her open top car is "ridiculous." He also says that the government is not serious in investigating incidents like last week's. "How come, at least in the last three years, there have been scores and scores if not hundreds of bomb blasts and suicide attacks in Pakistan and the only incidents that resulted in people being arrested and sentenced is in the two attacks on Pervez Musharraf?"

An autopsy would have been the obvious solution to the ongoing debate, but Bhutto's husband Asif Ali Zadari declined one at the time of her death, explaining at a news conference on Sunday that, "It was an insult to my wife, an insult to the mother of the nation. I know their forensic reports are useless. I refuse to give them her last remains." The government has since offered to exhume the body, which was buried Friday, in order to perform a post-mortem — but it may be a case of too little, too late. Doing so now only risks inflaming tensions. Islamic traditions hold that the body is sacred, and must not be disturbed in death. As expected, Bhutto's family declined the offer.

As for who plotted the assassination, that too is clouded by what many see as either government incompetence or a knee-jerk choice of "usual suspects." On Friday, the Interior Ministery claimed that investigators had intercepted a telephone call that proved that Baitullah Mehsud, a leader of the Pakistani Taliban thought to be affiliated with al-Qaeda, had instigated the attack. Ministry spokesman Cheema released a transcript of a purported conversation between Mehsud and a follower, offering congratulations for a job well done.

But Bhutto supporters are skeptical of the reports' veracity. "We do not know if it is a genuine transcript or one created by the intelligence agencies," says PPP party spokesman Farhatullah Babar. Mehsud has become a convenient scapegoat in recent terrorist attacks, sometimes standing in when investigators turn up empty-handed. Speaking through his spokesman to the BBC, Mehsud denied any involvement in the attack, as he did when he was accused in the October 18 suicide bombing at a Bhutto rally in Karachi that killed some 140. Such denials, of course, are meaningless, but they do exacerbate rumors of government complicity, a situation that benefits an anti-government insurgency. "There is a very strong possibility that the intelligence agencies were behind the attack," Mehsud's spokesman told the BBC.

The government pirouettes may have less to do with a possible cover-up of an Administration-led assassination than a poorly executed attempt at damage control. If Bhutto was killed in a deliberate attack by a sniper, the government would have much more to answer for than if she was the victim of an arguably less-focused terrorist bombing. Bhutto has been dogged by terrorist threats since she returned to Pakistan on October 18; attending a rally and waving to crowds from the sunroof of her car was clearly a risky undertaking. And the government can argue that providing security under such conditions is impossible. "Look at our country," says Abdul Sattar, a former foreign minister under Musharraf. "Ask whether anyone could get security. I do not know while moving on a street with the supporters lining up along the side, front and rear, whether our security authorities have the capabilities to have a wall of security around the car."

Bhutto's supporters have demanded an international, independent investigation into the events leading to her death. California Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi, the Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, said that Washington needed to answer some "troubling questions" about Pakistan's investigation so far. At yesterday's press conference, Bhutto's husband Zadari demanded a United Nations investigation, saying "We want a [assassinated Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik] Hariri commission-style investigation... we are writing to the United Nations for an international probe into her martyrdom." According to Dawn, a local newspaper Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf said that he would "consider" outside help during a phone call with British PM Gordon Brown yesterday, which many are interpreting as a "thanks, but no thanks" dismissal.

And then there is the cynical view. In some ways, the lack of a definitive answer suits all sides. The government can maintain its story that an al-Qaeda suicide bomb plot killed Bhutto, thus exonerating itself from negligence at best and complicity at worst. Meanwhile the PPP can leverage the insinuation of government culpability to keep Bhutto's death relevant as Pakistan prepares for the elections she died campaigning for.

* Article from time.com


Bhutto Inquiry Seen as 'Simply bizarre'

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - As calls for an international investigation into the assassination of opposition leader Benazir Bhutto increase, new details are emerging that suggest that the truth behind her death will be very difficult to uncover.

Within an hour of the attack that killed Bhutto on Thursday, the crime scene in Rawalpindi was cordoned off but washed down with fire hoses. A newly broadcast video of the attack directly contradicts the government's account of Bhutto's death, which was released about 26 hours after she was killed. No autopsy was performed, though the procedure is required in such controversial cases. Witnesses from her political party say they still have not been interviewed. Also, the doctors who tried to revive her are all in hiding.

Athar Minallah, a senior lawyer and board member of the medical group that includes Rawalpindi General Hospital, met with the doctors Saturday. He said they told him they had asked Rawalpindi police to arrange for experts to conduct a post-mortem examination but were rebuffed. Minallah said the doctors were forced to submit their clinical notes as the final report on Bhutto's death.

"Benazir's killing wasn't as shocking as is the manner in which the whole matter is being handled," Minallah said. "It is simply bizarre. It's unbelievable. I don't have the words."

The dispute over the government's investigation appears to be turning people against an already unpopular President Pervez Musharraf, who has appealed for calm. Musharaff, a U.S. ally in the war on terrorism, is at the shakiest part of his presidency since seizing power in 1999, and is facing calls from all sides to step down. The government is expected to announce Tuesday that next week's parliamentary elections will be delayed several weeks because of the strife.

There have been growing calls by members of Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party and even U.S. politicians for an outside investigation into Bhutto's death -- along the lines of the UN probe into the 2005 assassination of Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.

When Bhutto's homecoming procession was attacked in Karachi by suicide blasts in the early hours of Oct. 19, the government refused her request for outside investigators. Police did not even cordon off the crime scene. Journalists and curious party workers walked wherever they wanted, even onto the truck where Bhutto had been standing, where pieces of flesh and shrapnel remained. Cooperative police even showed off the head of one supposed suicide bomber.

Zulfiqar Ali Mirza, a party member, was in charge of security for the homecoming event, to celebrate the return of Bhutto from eight years of self-imposed exile. He said he met with police and government officials before and after the attack to discuss threats. "Nobody took me seriously," he said. "They just used to laugh it away."

The investigation into the October attack that killed 140 people has turned up nothing.

Party members said they had repeatedly asked for more security for Bhutto.

"Every day, every week we were sending letters to the Ministry of Interior, saying security should be beefed up," said Aman Ullah, a retired army brigadier who had been one of her closest aides for 11 years. "Nothing was done."

Bhutto, 54, a moderate, outspoken two-time prime minister considered to be the country's main opposition leader, had many enemies. Militants did not like her support for the U.S.-led war on terrorism and her liberal views. And some of the old guard from the "agencies" -- the three spy agencies that seem omnipresent in Pakistan -- simply hated her.

In interviews, she always said if she were killed, Islamic militants were not ultimately at fault. She said the blame would fall on someone in Musharraf's government or rogue people in the spy agencies.

Bhutto was killed Thursday after a campaign rally in Rawalpindi, an army garrison town where many agency men work. As she was leaving the rally in a white bulletproof LandCruiser, she poked her head out of the sunroof to wave at supporters. At least three gunshots were fired, and Bhutto dropped from view. Then a bomb exploded, killing at least 20 supporters.

At first, the state-run news agency quoted an unnamed official saying that Bhutto was killed by a bullet, just before the blast. Witnesses in the car with Bhutto said she was shot in the neck.

By Friday evening, only a few hours after Bhutto was buried next to her father, the Interior Ministry announced that the case was solved. Officials blamed Baitullah Mehsud, a leader of the Pakistani Taliban, who hides out in the country's lawless tribal areas, quoting a bugged telephone conversation that Mehsud allegedly had. Mehsud has denied the charge.

Officials also said that Bhutto had not been killed by a bullet but because she ducked when the bullets were fired, and that the blast forced her head against a sunroof lever.

The claims were immediately labeled preposterous by the people who had been with her, and a newly released video, obtained by Britain's Channel 4 television, added to public doubts. It showed a clean-cut man firing a pistol at Bhutto from a few feet away. Her hair and head scarf moved upward, and she collapsed into the vehicle. Only then did the bomb, reportedly detonated by a second man, explode.

Bhutto's husband, Asif Ali Zardari, said the video "denied" the government's account of his wife's death. "It just proves they've just been trying to muddy the water from the first day," he told CNN.

Several investigative missteps have contributed to skepticism about the government's conclusions. For example, journalists who were there said the crime scene was hosed down an hour after the blast.

Afzal Shigri, the former director general of the National Police Bureau and former inspector general of Sindh province, said he would have kept the crime scene sealed off for at least two days, to prevent even a small piece of evidence being lost.

"This was a very high-profile case," Shigri said. "You should not only follow the book but go the extra mile."

He also said the government made a mistake by announcing that the crime had been solved so soon.

Ullah said police have not yet interviewed party members who were with Bhutto. "Not yet," he said. "What a shame. So many days, and they haven't contacted anyone. I don't think they've even started the investigation yet."

Why no autopsy?

But most of the controversy over the initial investigation has centered on why there was no autopsy, which could have determined how Bhutto died.

The government said it respected the wishes of Bhutto's husband, who did not want an autopsy.

On Sunday night, Zardari said he rejected the autopsy request because he did not trust the government. "It was an insult to my wife, to the sister of the nation, to the mother of the nation," he said.

But by law, the government is supposed to override family wishes, especially if doctors request an autopsy, said two lawyers, three former high-level judges and a retired police official.

"If there is a doubt, we would ask for an autopsy," Shigri said.

Minallah, the lawyer, said doctors asked the Rawalpindi Police Chief Saud Aziz to grant an autopsy but he refused. Aziz was quoted by The Associated Press as saying an autopsy depends on family wishes.

On Monday, Interior Ministry spokesman Javed Iqbal Cheema said Bhutto's family would have the right to exhume her body for an autopsy.

The government has stood behind its investigation, even though the final medical report on Bhutto's death is vague and inconclusive. The seven doctors who signed it are surgeons, an anesthesiologist, a radiologist, a resident and administrators. They are not pathologists -- experts in determining the cause of death. Minallah said the report is simply clinical notes.

Their report, titled "Medical Report of Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto," describes how Bhutto was brought to Rawalpindi General Hospital at 5:35 p.m. Thursday with a wound on the right side of her head. The report then describes how doctors tried to revive her but declared her dead at 6:16 p.m. The wound was described: "Edges were irregular. No surrounding wounds or blackening was seen." But "wound was not further explored. Gentle aseptic dressing was used to cover the wound."

The report finished by saying the cause of death was "open head injury with depressed skull fracture, leading to Cardiopulmonary arrest."

Minallah said doctors had authorized him to speak for them.

"They were forced to submit even this report," Minallah said. "This is not a medical-legal report. These are the clinical notes of a doctor attending to a patient. A medical-legal report explains as to what is the cause of the injury -- whether it is a bullet, whether there are gunpowder traces, material in the wound. That is only possible after an autopsy is carried out."

* Article from chicagotribune.com


Account of Bhutto's Death Retracted

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — The Pakistani government has backed off earlier claims that opposition leader Benazir Bhutto died not from a bullet but because the force from a suicide blast forced her head into a sunroof crank, crushing her skull.

After increasing public uproar over the government investigation, the Interior Ministry issued a statement Tuesday saying there was "no intention to conceal anything from the people of Pakistan."

Interior Minister Hamid Nawaz on Monday even asked people and the media to forgive and ignore the comment made Friday night about the sunroof by Interior Ministry spokesman Javed Iqbal Cheema.

Cheema told CNN he based his statement about the sunroof lever "on the initial investigations and the reports by the medical doctors" who treated Bhutto. He said the ministry would wait for forensic investigators to finish their report before making any more conclusions about her cause of death.

"I was just narrating the facts, you know, and nothing less, nothing more," he said Tuesday.

But the medical report—criticized by many as unprofessional and simply clinical notes—said nothing about a sunroof or a latch. There was no autopsy to determine what actually killed Bhutto. Doctors have complained that their statements have been misrepresented by the government and have gone into hiding, said Athar Minallah, a top lawyer whom the doctors asked for help. The doctors asked police to authorize an autopsy despite the wishes of Bhutto's husband, but the police refused, Minallah said.

Mistakes in the government investigation have increased public anger and undermined any credibility it might have.

The scene of the attack on Bhutto—a gunman fired three shots at her after a campaign rally in Rawalpindi, followed by a suicide blast—was hosed down within an hour. Witnesses still have not been interviewed. The Islamic militant blamed for staging the attack denies having any role, and the transcript of the phone conversation in which he claims responsibility seems questionable, police experts said.

Despite declaring earlier that no foreign assistance was needed, government officials are expected to announce soon that outside investigators have been invited to help.

Although leaders from Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party had wanted a UN investigation, the Pakistani government has ruled that out, sources said. Investigators from Britain's Scotland Yard will most likely be asked to play a significant role.

* Article from chicagotribune.com


Sources: Bhutto was to Give U.S. Lawmakers Vote-rigging Report

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (CNN) -- On the day she died, Benazir Bhutto planned to hand over to visiting U.S. lawmakers a report accusing Pakistan's intelligence services of a plot to rig parliamentary elections, sources close to the slain former Pakistani prime minister told CNN Tuesday.

Bhutto was assassinated Thursday, hours before a scheduled meeting with Rep. Patrick Kennedy, D-Rhode Island, and Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pennsylvania.

A top Bhutto aide who helped write the report showed a copy to CNN.

"Where an opposing candidate is strong in an area, they [supporters of President Pervez Musharraf ] have planned to create a conflict at the polling station, even killing people if necessary, to stop polls at least three to four hours," the document says.

The report also accused the government of planning to tamper with ballots and voter lists, intimidate opposition candidates and misuse U.S.-made equipment to monitor communications of opponents.

"Ninety percent of the equipment that the USA gave the government of Pakistan to fight terrorism is being used to monitor and to keep a check on their political opponents," the report says.

The Pakistani government denied the allegations, with two Pakistani diplomatic sources calling the report "baseless." Rashid Qureshi, a spokesman for Musharraf, called the accusations "ridiculous" and said the election will be "free, fair and transparent."

"I think they are just a pack of lies," he said.

One Bhutto source said the document was compiled at her request and said the information came from sources inside the police and intelligence services.

The election had been scheduled for January 8, but in the wake of Bhutto's assassination, the Election Commission is expected to announce Wednesday that it will delay the vote at least four weeks into February, sources at the commission said.

Sen. Latif Khosa, who helped put the report together, accused the powerful Inter-Services Intelligence of operating a rigging cell from a safe house in the capital, Islamabad. The goal, he said, is to change voting results electronically on election day.

"The ISI has set up a mega-computer system where they can hack any computer in Pakistan and connect with the Election Commission," he said.

Media outlets in Pakistan, India and Bangladesh have run reports alleging that retired Brig. Gen. Ejaz Shah -- formerly an Inter-Services Intelligence officer and now head of the civilian Intelligence Bureau -- is involved in the vote rigging plans.

Shah's name also turned up in a letter Bhutto wrote to Musharraf after the first attempt on her life on October 18, when she returned to Pakistan after eight years in exile, Pakistani media reported. In the letter, the media reported, Shah was one of four Pakistani officials Bhutto named as people who wanted her dead.

The Pakistan government has denied those allegations as well.

Khosa said he could make no link between Bhutto's assassination and the report. Some terrorism experts also said there was no reason to believe Bhutto was killed because of the report, agreeing with Pakistani government contentions that al Qaeda was responsible for her death.

* Article from cnn.com