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Middle East
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Taliban back off claim on bin Laden11/17/2001
By MATA ULLAH CHAMAN, Pakistan — A Taliban official said Saturday that Osama bin Laden has
fled Afghanistan. Later, he backed off the claim, saying he didn't know where
bin Laden was. The claim by Abdul Salam Zaeef, the Taliban envoy to Pakistan, could not be
independently confirmed. The United States was skeptical, saying the report
could be a Taliban attempt to throw off the hunt for bin Laden, who is accused
in the Sept. 11 terror attacks in the United States. ``Osama has left Afghanistan with his children and his wives, and we have no
idea where he has gone,'' Zaeef told The Associated Press at the Chaman border
crossing as he returned from Afghanistan to Pakistan. Zaeef gave a different version to local reporters, saying bin Laden had left
the rapidly shrinking portion of Afghanistan still under Taliban control. He
also told the Arabic television station Al-Jazeera and the Pakistan-based Afghan
Islamic Press that he did not know bin Laden's whereabouts. Pentagon spokesman Glenn Flood said the U.S. military had no evidence bin
Laden left Afghanistan and that the claim could be a ruse to protect the leader
of the al-Qaida terror network. ``Our search continues,'' Flood said Saturday. In the early days of the confrontation with the United States over bin Laden,
the Taliban variously claimed that they did not know his whereabouts, then that
they were in contact with him but not controlling his movements. Another senior Taliban official — Mullah Najibullah, a Taliban leader in the
southeast Afghan border town of Spinboldak — said earlier Saturday that bin
Laden was alive, but said nothing more about his status. As U.S. troops scout a crumbling Afghanistan for bin Laden, experts have said
the few places he could try to flee to include Iraq, Somalia and the disputed
land of Kashmir, fought over by India and Pakistan. Perhaps bin Laden's best option would be to try to cross the Afghan-Pakistan
border. Long and porous, the frontier is jammed with refugees, and Pakistan is
home to militant groups sympathetic to bin Laden and his Taliban allies. But the terrain, especially in the north, is often treacherous and at this
time of year, the temperature can drop below freezing. Once over the border, bin
Laden would still have to traverse Pakistan, a key U.S. ally in the war against
him. |
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