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Bhutto returns to Pakistan, ending 8-year exile

After eight years in self-exile, Pakistan's former Prime Minister headed back home saying she was carrying a 'hope for a better future for democracy'.

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DUBAI: Former Pakistan Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto ended eight years of self-exile on Thursday, making a comeback that could eventually lead to power sharing with President Pervez Musharraf.   

Coming home to Karachi to lead her Pakistan People's Party into national elections meant to return her country to civilian rule, a joyful Bhutto set aside fears of assassination by al Qaeda-linked militants who have threatened her return.   

"I am thankful to God, I am very happy that I'm back in my country and I was dreaming of this day," a sobbing Bhutto said as she disembarked an Emirates flight from Dubai.   

Dressed in a green salwar kameez, her head covered by a white scarf, she passed under the Koran, and kissed the Muslim holy book. 

For years Bhutto vowed to return to Pakistan to end military dictatorship, yet she is coming back as a potential ally for General Musharraf, the army chief who took power in a 1999 coup.   

Before saying goodbye to her two daughters and husband, Asif Ali Zardari in Dubai, Bhutto described Pakistan as being at a crossroads between democracy and dictatorship.   

Musharraf is going through his weakest period, and there is strong speculation he will end up sharing power with Bhutto after national elections due in early January.   

The United States is believed to have quietly encouraged their alliance in order to keep nuclear-armed Pakistan pro-Western and committed to fighting al Qaeda and supporting NATO's efforts to stabilise Afghanistan.   

While the rest of Pakistan was transfixed by Bhutto's homecoming, Musharraf spent the morning at his army offices in Rawalpindi, with no official engagements scheduled, an aide said.   

Bhutto's imminent return has pleased investors. The Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE) benchmark 100-share index struck a life high of 14,802.61 points, up over 1 percent on hopes that her return bodes well for stability and democracy.   

More than 100,000 supporters lined the road to the airport and jammed the highway into the city.

The crowd was expected to swell once Bhutto left the airport to address a rally.   

Some 20,000 security personnel have been deployed to provide protection against threatened suicide bomb attacks by militants.   

Intelligence reports suggested at least three jihadi groups linked to al Qaeda and the Taliban were plotting suicide attacks, according to a provincial official.  

"She has an agreement with America. We will carry out attacks on Benazir Bhutto as we did on General Pervez Musharraf," Haji Omar, a Taliban commander in the Waziristan tribal region on the Afghan border, said by satellite telephone. 

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