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Bin Laden Living Comfortably in Pakistan: CNN | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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KABUL (AFP) – Al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden is living comfortably in a house in northwest Pakistan close to his deputy Ayman al-Zawahiri, CNN on Monday quoted a NATO official as saying.

The Saudi-born militant wanted for the September 11 attacks on the United States nine years ago is being protected by local people and “some members of the Pakistani intelligence services”, the television network said.

It also said that the Al-Qaeda number two, the Egyptian-born Zawahiri, was living close to him.

“Nobody in Al-Qaeda is living in a cave,” the unnamed senior NATO official is quoted as saying in a report datelined Kabul.

Bin Laden is likely to have moved around an area ranging from the mountains of Chitral near the Chinese border to the Kurram valley near Afghanistan’s Tora Bora in recent years, CNN reported the official as saying.

Pakistan’s tribal belt of Kurram and six other districts spanning 27,220 square kilometres (10,510 square miles) lies outside government control, and has long been suspected by Western intelligence to be bin Laden’s hiding place.

“The official also confirmed the US assessment that Mullah Omar, the leader of the Taliban, has moved between the cities of Quetta and Karachi in Pakistan over the last several months,” said the report on CNN’s website.

Pakistani authorities deny they are providing protection for the terror mastermind, who has a 25-million-dollar US bounty on his head.

“I categorically deny the report about the presence of Osama bin Laden or Ayman al-Zawahiri or even Mullah Omar in Pakistan,” Interior Minister Rehman Malik told reporters on Monday.

“Bin Laden… and all other terrorists are anti-Islam and anti-Pakistan and hired assassins. If we have any information we will take action against them,” he said.

A foreign ministry official speaking to AFP rejected the CNN report as “baseless” and “put out to malign Pakistan”.

A NATO spokesman in Kabul said the alliance had no immediate comment.

White House spokesman Tommy Vietor played down the significance of the reports on Bin Laden’s whereabouts.

“Rest assured, we continue to seek out Osama bin Laden and Al-Qaeda wherever they are and ensure they can no longer attack American people of the United States,” he said from Washington.

Bin Laden is believed to have escaped to Pakistan from Tora Bora, which was a Taliban stronghold during the US-led invasion of late 2001 that unseated the Islamist regime, which had provided him with a safe haven.

The invasion was launched to punish the Taliban for allowing Al-Qaeda to train and plot the September 11 attacks on the United States, which killed around 3,000 people.

The militants soon regrouped to launch an insurgency that is being fought by more than 150,000 US and NATO troops.

The United States considers Pakistan’s tribal belt the global headquarters of Al-Qaeda and a covert campaign of drone missile attacks targeting Taliban and Al-Qaeda operatives in the region expanded significantly last month.

Relations between Pakistan and the US-led NATO alliance in Afghanistan deteriorated following the September 30 killing of two Pakistani soldiers in a cross-border NATO helicopter raid in Kurram.

Pakistan subsequently closed the main road border crossing into Afghanistan used by NATO supply convoys for 11 days.

Pakistani officials have also been angered by reports of mounting US pressure on the military to launch an offensive against Taliban and Al-Qaeda in North Waziristan, considered the tribal belt’s premier militant fortress.

Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, predicted this month that bin Laden and Zawahiri — who also has a 25-million-dollar price on his head — would eventually be hunted down.

In August, the commander of foreign troops in Afghanistan, US General David Petraeus, said bin Laden was “far buried” in the mountains between Afghanistan and Pakistan and that capturing him remained a key task.

Bin Laden was last heard of in two purported audiotapes issued in early October in which he called for aid for flood victims in Pakistan and for action against global climate change.

Zawahiri, believed to be the main strategist and key ideologue in the Al-Qaeda hierarchy, has appeared more frequently in video and audiotapes, most recently in a recording issued four days after this year’s anniversary of 9/11.