Pakistan verdict on Bhutto assassination angers supporters
ISLAMABAD — A Pakistani court on Thursday sentenced two former police officers to 17 years in prison for failing to protect former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, but the same court acquitted five suspected militants who had confessed to taking part in her 2007 assassination.
Farhatullah Babar, the spokesman for Bhutto’s Pakistan People’s Party, expressed “disappointment and shock” over the verdict, saying “justice has not been done.”
Bhutto, then a prominent opposition leader, was killed by a suicide bomber who rushed her motorcade as she was campaigning to replace then-President Pervez Musharraf.
Musharraf, who has been accused of complicity in the assassination, pleaded not guilty at a 2013 court appearance and now lives in self-imposed exile. The judge on Thursday ordered his property seized after he failed to appear in court.


