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Pak PM says no plan to delay elections
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Pakistani Prime Minister Mohammed Mian Soomro said here Friday that there was no decision yet to delay the general elections scheduled on January 8.

"Right now the elections stand where they were," he told a news conference. "We will consult all the political parties to take any decision about it. I'm ready to meet them right now."

Soomro made the remarks a day after former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto was killed in a blast at her party's election rally in a park near the capital Islamabad.

On Bhutto's assassination, Soomro said that inquiry had been ordered.

"We can't blame anyone now," he said. "People must be calm."

He also disclosed that five policemen were among those killed in the suicide attack.

On Thursday night, President Pervez Musharraf directed Soomro to convene All-Parties Conference on the elections.

The Pakistan People's Party (PPP) Thursday demanded complete inquiry into the assassination of their leader.

"We demand complete investigation as to who were behind the attack," PPP deputy chief Makhdoom Amin Faheem told a news conference in Islamabad.

"Bhutto family and the party should be informed about the investigation," Faheem said.

He said that the PPP had decided to observe a 40-day mourning.

"We are in the shock and we are mourning," the PPP leader said when asked if his party would now take part in the Jan. 8 elections.

He said that U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice phoned him and conveyed condolences on behalf of her government.

Faheem was sitting in the car with Bhutto when the attacker fired three shots and later blast was carried out.

"Benazir was hit as she waved to the workers who were chanting slogans in her favor. If Benazir did not go out of the car, she would be saved," he said.

Fahem said that Bhutto sat in the car after the firing and the blast and then she fell down in the car and died.

Meanwhile, according to local press reports, PPP supporters went on streets chanting anti-government slogans and burned tyres in protest in major cities of Pakistan like Rawalpindi, Karachi, Peshawar and Quetta.

At least 10 people were killed and dozens wounded in fierce clashes, the interior ministry said.

"The death toll in the unrest after Bhutto's death is 10, mostly in Sindh province," ministry spokesman Javed Cheema said.

He said dozens of people had been wounded in the violence, which hit several cities across the country.

(Xinhua News Agency December 28, 2007)

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