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Middle East
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Taliban snub 'second chance' offerBy KATHY GANNON and AMIR SHAH Associated Press Writers 10/13/01 KABUL, Afghanistan Afghanistan's ruling Taliban have rejected President Bush's "second chance'' offer to surrender terrorist suspect Osama bin Laden, a Taliban official said Saturday. Word of the rebuff came as warplanes took to the skies in a seventh straight day of airstrikes, pounding areas around Kabul and Kandahar. People living near the scene of the Kabul strikes said at least one civilian was killed and four hurt. A Taliban official in Kabul, asked about the Bush offer, said the militia's position had not changed. "We will not hand over him to America without getting credible evidence about his involvement in terrorism,'' said Mullah Khaksar Akhund, the deputy interior minister. "Our policy is still the same.'' The Taliban statement was a response to Bush's assertion in a news conference Thursday that if the Islamic militia were to "cough him up and his people today,'' then the United States would "reconsider what we're doing to your country.'' "You still have a second chance,'' Bush said. "Just bring him in, and bring his leaders and lieutenants and other thugs and criminals with him.'' The Saturday morning airstrikes followed a hiatus in the U.S.-led campaign for most of Friday, the Muslim holy day. The air assault was launched Oct. 7 after weeks of fruitless efforts by the United States to get the Taliban to hand over bin Laden, the key suspect in the Sept. 11 terror attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. A pre-dawn sortie hit the area around Kabul's airport, and people living in a nearby neighborhood said one person was killed and four wounded. Four destroyed houses could be seen. "We have no way to rebuild our homes,'' said Mohammed Shoaib, whose house was one of those wrecked. "What will we do?'' "Osama is not in Kabul he is not living in mud houses of poor people,'' said another Kabul man, moneychanger Mohammed Wali. "We should not be attacked.'' The southern city of Kandahar, the Taliban stronghold, was targeted in a midmorning strike. In Kabul, Taliban Information Minister Kudarat Ullah Jamal said the city's airport was hit. He said several houses were destroyed and "a lot of people'' killed. The claim could not be independently verified. In neighboring Pakistan, a new confrontation was simmering between the government and anti-U.S., pro-Taliban demonstrators. A radical Islamic leader, Abdullah Shah Mazar, was detained Saturday by authorities in the port city of Karachi, and hundreds of his followers staged a sit-down strike in protest. On Friday, thousands of demonstrators clashed with police in Karachi, hurling stones and setting a fast-food restaurant ablaze. Police shot tear gas, and eventually gunfire, in response. Meanwhile, U.S. allies challenged the veracity of a Taliban report that 200 villagers were killed in a missile strike this week. British officials dismissed Taliban claims of mass civilian deaths as propaganda. Independent verification of reports from Taliban-controlled Afghanistan is almost impossible. Foreign journalists are barred, and Afghan journalists are not allowed to move about and report freely. Reports of civilian deaths caused unease for Pakistan, already facing an angry backlash from militant Islamic groups over its support for the United States against bin Laden and the Taliban. "We have been assured again and again that only terrorists and those who provide protection to terrorists will be targeted,'' Foreign Ministry spokesman Riaz Mohammed Khan told journalists on Friday. The British undersecretary of defense, Lewis Moonie, suggested Friday there could be a slowdown in bombing for the next several days because of the Muslim festival commemorating the mystical journey of the Prophet Muhammad to heaven. "I would not be surprised if activity was much less over this weekend,'' he said in London on Friday. Commemorations vary among Muslim countries, with some celebrating the holiday Friday or Saturday and others not until Monday. It is observed Monday in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Also Saturday, the Taliban dismissed persistent reports of mass defections of its fighters to the opposition alliance in Afghanistan's north. "These reports are baseless there are no defections among the Taliban,'' said Jamal, the Taliban information minister. "We are united and ready to fight against opposition and American troops. We are ready to sacrifice our lives for the cause of Islam.'' EDITOR'S NOTE: Kathy Gannon contributed to this dispatch from Islamabad, Pakistan. |
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