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Bin Laden, Omar not operating in Pakistan

February 10, 2008 00:00:00


ISLAMABAD, Feb 9 (Reuters): Pakistan rejected Saturday a United Sates (US) official's assertion that al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and Taliban leader Mullah Omar are operating from Pakistani territory.
A senior US administration official told reporters in Washington Bin Laden, his deputy Ayman al-Zawahri and others were operating out of Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Areas bordering Afghanistan.
Mullah Omar and other Taliban leaders were directing insurgency operations in Afghanistan from the Pakistani city of Quetta, said the US official who declined to be identified.
Pakistan has consistently denied that the militant leaders were on its territory since they disappeared when US-led troops overthrew the Taliban in Afghanistan for refusing to hand over bin Laden after the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.
Bin Laden and Omar are believed to have fled from Afghanistan at that time.
Pakistani Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Sadiq said if a US official had information on the whereabouts of the wanted militants he should tell Pakistan.
"If there is any actionable intelligence it should be shared with the government of Pakistan so that they can be neutralised," Sadiq said. "You don't talk to the media if you have information like this."
He said the US official's assertion was not correct.
"If he was right, he would claim the bounty money, not speak to the media," he said, referring to US reward money for information leading to arrest of the militants.
Pakistan did not know where the militant leaders were, Sadiq said. "If we knew, we would take action."
Pakistan supported the Taliban in Afghanistan before the September 11 attacks but President Pervez Musharraf threw his support behind the US-led campaign against terrorism after the attacks on US cities.
But with the Taliban gaining strength in Afghanistan despite the efforts of US and NATO troops, frustration has been growing in the United States with what critics see as Pakistan's less than whole- hearted efforts to tackle the militants on the border.
The US official said despite the presence of al Qaeda leaders in Pakistan, the US administration still saw Musharraf as a worthy ally.
The outcome of Pakistani elections, delayed until February 18 after the assassination of opposition leader Benazir Bhutto, could have consequences for Musharraf if a hostile parliament emerges.

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