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ISLAMABAD : A day after Pakistan opposition leader Benazir Bhutto was laid to rest, conflicting reports about the cause of her death remain.
An alleged Al-Qaeda leader, blamed by the government for killing her, also denied any involvement in the attack.
Security remains tight on the streets of Karachi, Islamabad and Larkana on the second day of national mourning.
Schools and banks are closed, and in the capital Islamabad, flags are at half-mast.
Three brigades of army and 12,000 para-military forces were deployed in Sindh province alone.
The tension in Pakistan is high in the wake of Benazir Bhutto's assassination.
"City is burning, no traffic on road. Workers are not going to their jobs, people are worried about not getting medicines, all medical stores are closed," said one Pakistani.
Across the country, the shock is still palpable.
Now the question remains - what exactly was the cause of Benazir Bhutto's death?
Pakistani government officials are issuing conflicting and contradictory statements.
The government said she was probably hit by a splinter from the suicide bomb attack.
But Dr Mussadiq Khan, the senior doctor who treated Ms Bhutto in hospital, said she died from an injury caused when she fell against the armoured car.
Earlier the same doctor claimed that she was hit by at least two bullets in her neck and head.
Dr Khan said: "Yes it was a big wound that usually occurs when something big, with a lot of speed, hits that area."
An aide of Ms Bhutto who bathed her body also said he saw a bullet wound.
Analysts and experts agree that the January 8 elections may not be held in time as Ms Bhutto's Pakistan People's Party will hold a 40-day mourning period.
Another major opposition party led by Nawaz Sharif has decided to totally boycott the elections.
All eyes are now set on whether Ms Bhutto's husband Asif Zardari and senior People's Party officials to see if they decide to join the elections or seek a postponement of the polls. - CNA/ch/so
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