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¡@¡@Bilawal, an Oxford law student, is Bhutto's 19-year-old
son. He will lead the party as chairman with his father.
Benazir Bhutto's party appointed her son and her husband
to succeed the slain Pakistani opposition leader yesterday and the party said it
would take part in a January 8 election as Bhutto would have wanted.But a senior
official of the former ruling party said the election was likely to be delayed
for up to eight weeks.
Bhutto's assassination in a suicide attack on Thursday has
stoked violence and thrown into doubt the election, deepening a crisis in the
important US ally against terrorism as it struggles to emerge from military
rule.
Bilawal, an Oxford law student, is Bhutto's 19-year-old
son. He will lead the party as chairman with his father, Asif Ali Zardari, who
is to be co-chairman.
Zardari said the party would take part in the election as
his assassinated wife would have wanted.
"Despite this dangerous situation, we will go for
elections, according to her will and thinking," Zardari told a news conference
at the Bhutto family home in Naudero in the south of the country, after a party
meeting.
Bilawal, introduced at the news conference as Bilawal
Bhutto Zardari, said the party's long struggle for democracy would continue with
new vigour. "My mother always said, democracy is the best revenge," he said.
Earlier, a senior official of the party that backs
President Pervez Musharraf and ruled until a caretaker government was set up
last month, said a postponement of the election was increasingly likely because
of the turmoil that erupted after Bhutto's killing.
"It seems more than likely that elections will be
delayed," said the official, Tariq Azim Khan. He said he expected a six to eight
week postponement.
Bhutto had hoped to win power for a third time in the vote
though analysts expected a three-way split between her, the party of another
former prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, and the party that backs Musharraf.
The party can expect to pick up a sympathy vote after Bhutto's killing
and its core support would remain for now, even though Bilawal would return to
university and the fact that Zardari, like Bhutto, was tainted by corruption
accusations, political analysts said.
"It will retain support in the short term but obviously,
in the long term they'll have to earn their spurs and demonstrate leadership,"
said former minister and analyst Shafqat Mahmood.
But the choice of the Bhutto son and husband to lead the
party raised eyebrows among some Pakistanis.
"I don't think Zardari is capable enough of handling the
party himself. Bilawal is too young, the father is not capable. Someone else
should be appointed," said Ferooz Menon, 37, who has an electronics business in
the eastern city of Lahore.
Anger against Musharraf burns strongly among Bhutto
supporters and since her death sporadic violence has erupted, boosting fears
about nuclear-armed Pakistan's stability.
Karachi, Pakistan's biggest city, financial capital and
main port, has been paralyzed by a spasm of street violence. Shops have been
shuttered, petrol stations closed and railways attacked by angry mobs, bringing
transport to a standstill.
The death toll from the violence has reached 47.
Streets in Karachi were generally quiet and deserted
yesterday though a disabled man was burned to death when a petrol station was
set on fire.(Agencies)