New Delhi: In a latest move in the Karachi blasts investigation case, Pakistani police have released a photograph of a man believed to be the suicide bomber who killed at least 139 people on Thursday.
Police have however not been able to confirm which group the man belonged to. Nobody has claimed responsibility for the attack on Pakistan former prime minister Benazir Bhutto's convoy, but police suspect pro-Taliban militants.
Bhutto says she sent President Pervez Musharraf the names of three former military officials she accuses of involvement in the attack.
The Pakistan People's Party (PPP) Chairperson has deferred her plans to go to the town of Larkana, where her father Zulfikar Ali Bhutto is buried.
On Saturday, Bhutto's angry supporters went on rampage in the city and forced shops to shut down.
Meanwhile, the government has said elections in January will take place as planned.
Earlier on Friday, Bhutto accused supporters of Pakistan's late military ruler Mohammed Zia ul-Haq for the bomb explosion that killed more than 139 people after her arrival at Karachi.
In an interview to the Paris-Match magazine, Bhutto said: "I know exactly who wants to kill me. It is dignitaries of the former regime of General Zia who are today behind the extremism and the fanaticism." The interview was first published on Paris-Match's Internet site.
Zia overthrew Bhutto's father, prime minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, in 1977 and had him hanged two years later. He died in a plane crash in 1988.
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