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Taliban Say They Know Where Bin Laden Hiding; Accused Aid Workers Back on Trial in Afghanistan
Associated Press ^ | Sunday, September 30, 2001 | Laura King The Associated Press

Posted on 09/30/2001 11:48:51 AM PDT by JohnHuang2

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) - Under threat of a U.S. military strikes, Afghanistan's hard-line rulers said explicitly for the first time Sunday that Osama bin Laden is still in the country and they know where his hide-out is.

That acknowledgment came as the trial of eight foreign aid workers charged with preaching Christianity resumed in the Afghan capital, Kabul. The proceedings had been suspended after the Sept. 11 terror attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.

Meanwhile, fierce fighting was reported in the jagged mountains of northern Afghanistan. Rebel guerrillas said they had seized a northeastern district from Taliban troops, while the Taliban said at least a dozen opposition soldiers were killed and several hurt in a blast at a base north of Kabul.

Since the crisis erupted, the Taliban have given varying accounts of their dealings with bin Laden, who has been sheltered in Afghanistan since 1996 and who U.S. officials say presides over a terrorist network known as al-Qaida, or "the base."

Initially, the Afghan rulers said they didn't know where to find bin Laden, a contention scoffed at by U.S. officials. Then, last week, they said they had been able to deliver a message to him, a week-old request from the country's top clerics that he leave Afghanistan voluntarily.

On Sunday, the Afghan ambassador in neighboring Pakistan - the only country that has diplomatic links with the Taliban - said bin Laden was hidden away for his own protection at a site inside Afghanistan known only to top Taliban security officials.

"He's in Afghanistan. He is under our control," the envoy, Abdul Salam Zaeef, told a journalists in Islamabad. "He's in a place which cannot be located by anyone."

Zaeef said the Taliban, who have rejected a series of appeals to hand over bin Laden and avert a military confrontation, were willing to talk. "We are thinking of negotiation," he said, adding that if direct evidence against bin Laden were produced, "it might change things."

That met with a crisp rebuff from Washington. "The president has said we're not negotiating," White House chief of staff Andrew Card said on Fox News Sunday.

Pakistan's president, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, said hopes that the Taliban will hand over bin Laden and accede to other U.S. demands are "very dim." Pakistani contacts have not succeeded "in moderating their views on the surrender of Osama bin Laden," Musharraf told CNN.

Pakistan has lent its backing to the United States in the confrontation over bin Laden, but outbursts of anti-American sentiment have the government worried. At a rally near the volatile border city of Peshawar on Monday, a prominent Pakistani cleric told hundreds of followers to kill any American they can find if Afghanistan comes under attack.

"Butcher them after the American attack on Kabul, because they deserve it!" urged Mullah Samiul Haq, who is to be part of a Pakistani clerical delegation traveling to Afghanistan on Tuesday for talks with the Taliban.

The threat of military confrontation has hung over the case of the eight foreign aid workers - two Americans, two Australians, and four Germans. At the resumption of proceedings Sunday, the top judge, Noor Mohammed Saqib, told the defendants the threat of a U.S. strike would not influence their trial.

Mercer's mother, Deborah Oddy, following events from Pakistan with other relatives of the workers, said her daughter had written a letter Sept. 25 asking that any U.S. retaliation wait until the workers had been freed.

"All eight of us want to live," she wrote.

The Taliban also sent a special team to the northeastern city of Jalalabad to investigate a British journalist arrested Friday after sneaking into Afghanistan. The Afghan Islamic Press said the team wanted to determine if Yvonne Ridley, 43, a reporter for the Sunday Express of London, was a spy.

The Taliban, meanwhile, were cracking down on any of their own citizens thought to sympathize with the enemy.

Taliban authorities, in a statement distributed by the Afghan Islamic Press, said six men were arrested for distributing pamphlets supporting the United States and Afghanistan's exiled king - a crime that could be punishable by death. Top clerics from three provinces also issued an edict Sunday saying any Afghan believed to sympathize with the United States or the former king should be heavily fined and have their house burned down.

The United Nations this weekend began delivering its first shipments of food and other emergency humanitarian supplies since the Sept. 11 attacks. A convoy of trucks carrying more than 200 tons of wheat left Pakistan for Kabul on Sunday. Other supplies headed Saturday for opposition-controlled territory.

In the latest fighting in Afghanistan's north, the rebel alliance claimed it had captured the Taliban-controlled Qadis district in the northeast. Alliance spokesman Mohammed Habil, reached by telephone, claimed 30 Taliban soldiers and their commander were captured, and another 120 Taliban troops had defected to the rebels.

Taliban radio, in turn, said at least 12 rebel soldiers died and several were wounded in an explosion at a military base in Baghram, 36 miles north of Kabul.

Neither side had any immediate comment on the other's claims.


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1 posted on 09/30/2001 11:48:51 AM PDT by JohnHuang2
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To: JohnHuang2
...the trial of eight foreign aid workers charged with preaching Christianity resumed...

"By sacrificing human life to serve their radical visions, by abandoning every value except the will to power, they follow in the path of fascism, Nazism and totalitarianism. And they will follow that path all the way to where it ends in history's unmarked grave of discarded lies." Dubya - September 20, 2001...

2 posted on 09/30/2001 11:58:19 AM PDT by Libloather
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To: JohnHuang2
I would take the word of the Taliban any old day of the week. Sure I would.
3 posted on 09/30/2001 12:03:15 PM PDT by dalebert
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To: JohnHuang2
One can't help but wonder at this juncture what it will take for our nation to respond? When is enough enough? When do we avenge the sacrifice of our fallen at the hands of these sons of satan? When do we safeguard our own future, and our childrens' future by taking the vital and necessary steps toward the excorsism of these sons of satan?
4 posted on 09/30/2001 12:48:56 PM PDT by takenoprisoner
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