Showing posts with label Laden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Laden. Show all posts

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Bin Laden raid sparks rare criticism in Pakistan

Sunday, May 8, 2011
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ISLAMABAD (AP) ? Outraged Pakistanis stepped up calls Saturday for top government officials to resign following the daring American helicopter raid that killed Osama bin Laden and embarrassed the nation.





  • A Pakistani girl stands near the compound of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden, in Abbottabad, Pakistan, on Saturday.

    By Aqeel Ahmed, AP


    A Pakistani girl stands near the compound of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden, in Abbottabad, Pakistan, on Saturday.



By Aqeel Ahmed, AP


A Pakistani girl stands near the compound of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden, in Abbottabad, Pakistan, on Saturday.






Some of the sharpest language was directed at the army and intelligence chiefs, a rare challenge to arguably the two most powerful men in the country, who are more accustomed to being feared than publicly criticized.


The Pakistani army has said it had no idea bin Laden was hiding for up to six years in Abbottabad, an army town only two and a half hours' drive from the capital, Islamabad. That claim has met with skepticism from U.S. officials, who have repeatedly criticized Pakistan for failing to crack down on Islamist militants.


But with anti-American sentiment already high in the South Asian nation, many Pakistani citizens were more incensed by the fact that the country's military was powerless to stop the American raid.


Some lawmakers and analysts expressed hope that civilian leaders can seize on this anger to chip away at the military's power, but others doubt that even an embarrassment of this scale will shake the status quo.


"It was an attack on our soil, and the army was sleeping," said Zafar Iqbal, a 61-year-old retired bureaucrat in the central city of Lahore.


He singled out the leaders of Pakistan's army, air force and the main intelligence organization — Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, Air Chief Marshal Rao Qamar Suleman and Gen. Ahmed Shuja Pasha — saying they all should be forced to resign.


"All three of these men have brought insult to us, and they deserve all the punishment," said Iqbal.


The direct criticism of Kayani and Pasha was particularly striking because the two men enjoy a vaunted status in Pakistan due to their role in protecting the country from external threats, especially archenemy India. Some also feared that bad mouthing the shadowy spy agency, known as the Inter-Services Intelligence agency, could cause trouble and possibly even harm.


Kayani has also had strong backing from the U.S. and other NATO countries, which have sought to enlist his help in battling militants along the country's border with Afghanistan.


It is unclear whether anyone will actually be forced to step down. The Pakistani government is viewed by many as totally unresponsive to the numerous woes plaguing the nation, from a struggling economy to frequent terrorist attacks.


"It is not time to sprinkle salt on wounds," said Pakistan's Information Minister Firdous Aashiq Awan when asked about the calls for senior officials to resign. "It is time to apply ointment on the nation's wounds."


The Pakistani military also denied reports that the ISI chief, Pasha, planned to resign in the wake of the bin Laden raid.


U.S. Navy SEALs swooped into Abbottabad by helicopter before dawn Monday, killed bin Laden and were on their way back to Afghanistan before the army could respond. The army has said it had no prior knowledge of the operation — a claim backed up by the U.S.


"No one other than the ISI and army chiefs are responsible for this disgrace of American attacks on our homeland," said Jaffar Ali, a 35-year-old bank employee in the southern city of Karachi. "It is a complete failure of our security."


In contrast, former Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi, a lawmaker for the ruling Pakistan People's Party, fixed the blame squarely on President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani — likely motivated in part by past conflict with the two men.


"This is a great violation of our sovereignty, but it is for the president and prime minister to resign and no one else," Qureshi told reporters Saturday in the central city of Lahore.


The main opposition leader in parliament, Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan, took a less selective approach. He said anyone from Zardari on down who can be faulted for what happened in Abbottabad should resign.


"This is a call coming from every street of Pakistan," Khan told reporters in Lahore.


Qureshi, the former foreign minister, said parliament should conduct a thorough inquiry into the raid.


Ayesha Siddiqa, a Pakistani defense analyst, said the civilian government should broaden its focus and seize the opportunity to conduct a comprehensive assessment of the country's military and intelligence agencies — a process that could reign in the amount of money they receive and reduce their power over Pakistani politics.


"I don't want something that just looks at where they went wrong this particular time," said Siddiqa. "It should go beyond this one event."


Others held out little hope that Pakistan's civilian leaders have the skill and authority to take on the army, irrespective of the ripples from the bin Laden raid. Many of them are viewed as corrupt and only looking out for their own self-interest.


"Can we fix ourselves? Take a look around. Does anyone think Asif Zardari has what it takes?" Cyril Almeida wrote on Friday in an editorial in Pakistan's leading English-language newspaper, Dawn.


Zardari and Gilani met with the head of Pakistan's army, Kayani, and other senior officials in Islamabad on Saturday to discuss the bin Laden raid, said the prime minister's office. Gilani plans to brief parliament about the raid on Monday.


It is unclear where bin Laden was located before he moved to Abbottabad. Residents of Chak Shah Mohammad, a sparsely populated village close to Abbottabad, denied a report in the New York Times Saturday that bin Laden had lived there for two and a half years with his family before moving to Abbottabad.


"I don't think the kind of people you and the intelligence agencies are looking for are here or have ever lived here," said Mohammad Shazad Awan, a former army soldier who has driven a public minibus in the area for the last 12 years.


But residents of Abbottabad were also not aware that bin Laden had been living there for such a long time.


Awan, who said he works on the side as an informant for the government, said many Pakistani intelligence operatives were in Chak Shah Mohammad on Friday asking whether bin Laden had lived there.


A senior Pakistani intelligence official said he could neither confirm nor deny the report, which cited information from one of bin Laden's three wives who were detained after the raid. He spoke on condition of anonymity in line with the agency's policy.


Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.




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Bin Laden raid sparks rare criticism in Pakistan

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ISLAMABAD (AP) ? Outraged Pakistanis stepped up calls Saturday for top government officials to resign following the daring American helicopter raid that killed Osama bin Laden and embarrassed the nation.





  • A Pakistani girl stands near the compound of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden, in Abbottabad, Pakistan, on Saturday.

    By Aqeel Ahmed, AP


    A Pakistani girl stands near the compound of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden, in Abbottabad, Pakistan, on Saturday.



By Aqeel Ahmed, AP


A Pakistani girl stands near the compound of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden, in Abbottabad, Pakistan, on Saturday.






Some of the sharpest language was directed at the army and intelligence chiefs, a rare challenge to arguably the two most powerful men in the country, who are more accustomed to being feared than publicly criticized.


The Pakistani army has said it had no idea bin Laden was hiding for up to six years in Abbottabad, an army town only two and a half hours' drive from the capital, Islamabad. That claim has met with skepticism from U.S. officials, who have repeatedly criticized Pakistan for failing to crack down on Islamist militants.


But with anti-American sentiment already high in the South Asian nation, many Pakistani citizens were more incensed by the fact that the country's military was powerless to stop the American raid.


Some lawmakers and analysts expressed hope that civilian leaders can seize on this anger to chip away at the military's power, but others doubt that even an embarrassment of this scale will shake the status quo.


"It was an attack on our soil, and the army was sleeping," said Zafar Iqbal, a 61-year-old retired bureaucrat in the central city of Lahore.


He singled out the leaders of Pakistan's army, air force and the main intelligence organization — Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, Air Chief Marshal Rao Qamar Suleman and Gen. Ahmed Shuja Pasha — saying they all should be forced to resign.


"All three of these men have brought insult to us, and they deserve all the punishment," said Iqbal.


The direct criticism of Kayani and Pasha was particularly striking because the two men enjoy a vaunted status in Pakistan due to their role in protecting the country from external threats, especially archenemy India. Some also feared that bad mouthing the shadowy spy agency, known as the Inter-Services Intelligence agency, could cause trouble and possibly even harm.


Kayani has also had strong backing from the U.S. and other NATO countries, which have sought to enlist his help in battling militants along the country's border with Afghanistan.


It is unclear whether anyone will actually be forced to step down. The Pakistani government is viewed by many as totally unresponsive to the numerous woes plaguing the nation, from a struggling economy to frequent terrorist attacks.


"It is not time to sprinkle salt on wounds," said Pakistan's Information Minister Firdous Aashiq Awan when asked about the calls for senior officials to resign. "It is time to apply ointment on the nation's wounds."


The Pakistani military also denied reports that the ISI chief, Pasha, planned to resign in the wake of the bin Laden raid.


U.S. Navy SEALs swooped into Abbottabad by helicopter before dawn Monday, killed bin Laden and were on their way back to Afghanistan before the army could respond. The army has said it had no prior knowledge of the operation — a claim backed up by the U.S.


"No one other than the ISI and army chiefs are responsible for this disgrace of American attacks on our homeland," said Jaffar Ali, a 35-year-old bank employee in the southern city of Karachi. "It is a complete failure of our security."


In contrast, former Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi, a lawmaker for the ruling Pakistan People's Party, fixed the blame squarely on President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani — likely motivated in part by past conflict with the two men.


"This is a great violation of our sovereignty, but it is for the president and prime minister to resign and no one else," Qureshi told reporters Saturday in the central city of Lahore.


The main opposition leader in parliament, Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan, took a less selective approach. He said anyone from Zardari on down who can be faulted for what happened in Abbottabad should resign.


"This is a call coming from every street of Pakistan," Khan told reporters in Lahore.


Qureshi, the former foreign minister, said parliament should conduct a thorough inquiry into the raid.


Ayesha Siddiqa, a Pakistani defense analyst, said the civilian government should broaden its focus and seize the opportunity to conduct a comprehensive assessment of the country's military and intelligence agencies — a process that could reign in the amount of money they receive and reduce their power over Pakistani politics.


"I don't want something that just looks at where they went wrong this particular time," said Siddiqa. "It should go beyond this one event."


Others held out little hope that Pakistan's civilian leaders have the skill and authority to take on the army, irrespective of the ripples from the bin Laden raid. Many of them are viewed as corrupt and only looking out for their own self-interest.


"Can we fix ourselves? Take a look around. Does anyone think Asif Zardari has what it takes?" Cyril Almeida wrote on Friday in an editorial in Pakistan's leading English-language newspaper, Dawn.


Zardari and Gilani met with the head of Pakistan's army, Kayani, and other senior officials in Islamabad on Saturday to discuss the bin Laden raid, said the prime minister's office. Gilani plans to brief parliament about the raid on Monday.


It is unclear where bin Laden was located before he moved to Abbottabad. Residents of Chak Shah Mohammad, a sparsely populated village close to Abbottabad, denied a report in the New York Times Saturday that bin Laden had lived there for two and a half years with his family before moving to Abbottabad.


"I don't think the kind of people you and the intelligence agencies are looking for are here or have ever lived here," said Mohammad Shazad Awan, a former army soldier who has driven a public minibus in the area for the last 12 years.


But residents of Abbottabad were also not aware that bin Laden had been living there for such a long time.


Awan, who said he works on the side as an informant for the government, said many Pakistani intelligence operatives were in Chak Shah Mohammad on Friday asking whether bin Laden had lived there.


A senior Pakistani intelligence official said he could neither confirm nor deny the report, which cited information from one of bin Laden's three wives who were detained after the raid. He spoke on condition of anonymity in line with the agency's policy.


Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.




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U.S. releases bin Laden videos

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WASHINGTON ? The Pakistani compound where Osama bin Laden was killed served as the command center for the al-Qaeda organization and where the terror leader — even in hiding — continued to assert control of strategy and direct operatives with the goal of hitting the U.S. homeland again, a senior U.S. intelligence official said Saturday.





  • This image from video released Saturday shows Osama bin Laden. Videos show bin Laden watching himself on TV.

    Department of Defense, via AP


    This image from video released Saturday shows Osama bin Laden. Videos show bin Laden watching himself on TV.



Department of Defense, via AP


This image from video released Saturday shows Osama bin Laden. Videos show bin Laden watching himself on TV.






A series of videos seized from the compound show an aging bin Laden rehearsing speeches and watching televised news coverage of his exploits. One of the five brief video clips released Saturday by the government is believed to have been made last fall. It shows bin Laden — his long beard dyed black — dressed in a white tunic and gold robe practicing a "message to the American people" in which he denegrates U.S. policy, said the official, who briefed reporters on the condition that he remain anonymous.


Another shows bin Laden lounging on a rug wrapped in a brown blanket watching broadcast news coverage of himself on a small television. Occasionally he changes the channel with a remote control clicker in his right hand. It is unclear whether any of the videos were shot in the Pakistani compound.


The videos are part of what the official described as the "single largest collection of information from a senior terror leader ever."


"The collection is large and it is proving invaluable," the official said.


The cache of written documents, computer hard-drives, cellphones, videos and electronic data bases is depicting bin Laden as "the active leader of al-Qaeda," the official said.


"He was far from a figurehead; bin Laden was focused on international terror operations and attacking the United States," he said.


The videos and other material, the official said, suggest that bin Laden remained very active, offering ideas and directing terror operatives in the field. He also remained interested in striking transportation and infrastructure centers in the United States and elsewhere, the official said.


"He was driving strategy and operational planning within al-Qaeda," the official said. He declined to elaborate on possible locations or specific plots. Earlier in the week, the Department of Homeland Security issued an advisory to the U.S. rail system after information recovered in the bin Laden mission disclosed an interest in attacking trains in the U.S.


In a written statement, CIA Director Leon Panetta said the material seized from the compound "only further confirms how important it was to go after bin Laden."


Seeking to dispel any doubts about the death of the terror leader, the intelligence official said a DNA analysis, which drew material from bin Laden's extended family, amounted to a certain identification. The official said the chance of error was "1 in 11.8 quadrillion."


Although bin Laden is believed to have been living in the compound for years, the official also said there was no evidence yet to suggest that the Pakistani government was aware that he was there.







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Saturday, May 7, 2011

Airline ticket refunds up after bin Laden death, firm says

Saturday, May 7, 2011
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By Ben Mutzabaugh, USA TODAY


- UPDATED: 1:50 p.m. ET

Refunds for airline tickets sold by U.S. travel agents, including online travel websites, increased in the days after Osama Bin Laden's death, says a company that facilitates transactions and provides data information for U.S. airlines.

Virginia-based Airlines Reporting Corporation (ARC) says in a release:

Initial data revealed ticket refunds increased to 33,518 on Monday, May 2, and Tuesday, May 3, compared to 24,146 on Monday, April 25, and Tuesday, April 26, the week before. Refunds processed on May 2 and 3 represent 2.6% of the 1.3 million outstanding air tickets during this period, versus 1.9% of the 1.2 million outstanding tickets during April 25 and 26.

I asked the ARC to follow-up on its findings, and here's what the firm had to say:

"We had received some industry queries about any changes or refunds after bin Laden's death. We looked at the data and saw a bump in refunds on Monday and Tuesday, although the data since is saying that things have settled down to the normal level we see daily," ARC spokesman Peter Abzug says in en e-mail to Today the Sky.

He adds:

We are in no way saying that this is directly related to the bin Laden event; we were only trying to provide a snapshot based on travel agency transactions (both brick and mortar and online.) For whatever reason, the bump was short lived and we can't positively say what it was from...there just seemed to be some interest in the information and that is why it was release. By the way, as it indicated in the release, the refunds to outstanding tickets represent a very small percentage...so there was definitely no panic.


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Walking dead: Bin Laden lookalike roams Colombian neighborhood

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Thursday, May 5, 2011

Obama decides not to release 'graphic' bin Laden photos

Thursday, May 5, 2011
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WASHINGTON ? President Obama declared Wednesday that "you will not see bin Laden walking on this earth again" but said he would not release photos of the terrorist leader's corpse as proof that he is dead.





  • President Obama, speaking Wednesday at the White House, said of the photos,

    By Carolyn Kaster, AP


    President Obama, speaking Wednesday at the White House, said of the photos, "We don't trot out this stuff as trophies."



By Carolyn Kaster, AP


President Obama, speaking Wednesday at the White House, said of the photos, "We don't trot out this stuff as trophies."






"It is important for us to make sure that very graphic photos of somebody who was shot in the head are not floating around as an incitement to additional violence, as a propaganda tool," Obama told CBS' 60 Minutes in an interview to be broadcast Sunday. "You know, that's not who we are. You know, we don't trot out this stuff as trophies."


Obama's decision put an end to two days of speculation about whether the White House would release photos of the dead al-Qaeda leader or other images from the compound where he was shot on Monday or his subsequent burial at sea.


Although CIA Director Leon Panetta on Tuesday told NBC Nightly News that he didn't think there was any question that "ultimately a photograph would be presented to the public," White House press secretary Jay Carney said Obama "held this opinion very firmly."


The White House has said repeatedly that there is ample evidence that Osama bin Laden is dead: from photos, DNA sampling and facial recognition technology. "There are going to be some folks that deny it," said Obama, alluding to conspiracy theorists. But "there's no doubt that bin Laden is dead," he said. "So we don't think that a photograph in and of itself is going to make any difference."


Reaction to his decision was mostly positive. "If there was a serious doubt out there, if people were claiming he was still alive, that (would be) different," said former 9/11 Commission chairman Tom Kean, a Republican. "But it seems to me that everyone is in agreement that he's dead. So particularly if it's graphic, I don't see the necessity of it."


Carie Lemack, whose mother Judy Larocque died aboard American Airlines Flight 11 on 9/11, said, "There are people out there who are going to continue to demand proof, but I don't think that releasing the photos would give them the proof. I want to make sure nobody else dies because of this man."


Lemack plans to attend today's ceremony at Ground Zero in New York City, where Obama will lay a wreath at the site of the World Trade Center towers. Former president George W. Bush declined Obama's invitation to join him, citing a desire to stay out of the spotlight. Obama, who will not make public remarks, plans private meetings with relatives of 9/11 victims and first responders.


In Congress, the heads of the House and Senate intelligence committees also said they support keeping the images classified. "I don't think that the timing is such that something incendiary is the right thing to do." said Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., chairwoman of the Senate committee. Said Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich., head of the House panel: "I don't want to make the job of our troops serving in places like Iraq and Afghanistan any harder than it already is."The risks of release outweigh the benefits. Conspiracy theorists around the world will just claim the photos are doctored anyway, and there is a real risk that releasing the photos will only serve to inflame public opinion in the Middle East. ... Imagine how the American people would react if al-Qaeda killed one of our troops or military leaders, and put photos of the body on the Internet. Osama bin Laden is not a trophy he is dead and let's now focus on continuing the fight until al-Qaeda has been eliminated."


But opinion was not unanimous. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., called Obama's decision "a mistake."


"The whole purpose of sending our soldiers into the compound, rather than an aerial bombardment, was to obtain indisputable proof of Bin Laden's death," Graham said. "I know bin Laden is dead. But the best way to protect and defend our interests overseas is to prove that fact to the rest of the world," he said.


Former Alaska governor Sarah Palin also disapproved. She tweeted: "Show photo as warning to others seeking America's destruction. No pussy-footing around, no politicking, no drama; it's part of the mission."


Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., had another idea: keep the images under seal for a period of time, maybe 10 years, and then make them available. "The free flow of information is not just a matter of good government, but a necessary part of our democracy," Nelson wrote in a letter to Obama.


Obama's decision to withhold the images came as the White House also stopped releasing details of the dramatic raid on bin Laden's compound. One day after officials corrected misstatements by counterterrorism czar John Brennan, who had said bin Laden had been armed and that his wife had been killed, Carney said no more details about the raid would be released because the methods used by the Navy SEALs in the operation are top-secret and that secrecy must be maintained for possible future raids.


"In terms of the operational details, we have gotten to the point where we cannot cross lines because of the necessity for preserving the methods and operational techniques and capabilities of the kinds of forces that were used in this case," he said. "We've gone to the limit of our ability to do that and still maintain some of the things we need to maintain and be kept secret."





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Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Reports: SEALs back in USA, thought bin Laden was going for gun

Wednesday, May 4, 2011
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Forgive bin Laden? Dalai Lama's surprising view

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Pakistanis doubt government claims about knowledge of bin Laden

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LAHORE, Pakistan ? Farhan Masood feels like many Pakistanis on the subject of Osama bin Laden: He's having a hard time believing the government's claim that it had no idea the al-Qaeda mastermind was living for years in a nice town with a large military base an hour's drive from the capital.





  • Pakistanis along with international and local media gather Tuesday outside Osama bin Laden's compound, where he was killed during a raid by U.S. special forces.

    Getty Images


    Pakistanis along with international and local media gather Tuesday outside Osama bin Laden's compound, where he was killed during a raid by U.S. special forces.



Getty Images


Pakistanis along with international and local media gather Tuesday outside Osama bin Laden's compound, where he was killed during a raid by U.S. special forces.






"Nothing can happen of any sort without the involvement of officials anywhere," said Masood, who runs SoloTech, a company involved in retinal- and facial-recognition technology. "We believe that Osama bin Laden was not killed in Pakistan. If he was killed, then where is the footage? The photos of the incident?"


The Pakistan government appeared Wednesday to issue conflicting accounts of what it knew and when it knew it, angering Pakistanis who admire bin Laden and and those who did not care for him. Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani, breaking his silence on the subject, said his government was in the dark as were others.


"There is an intelligence failure of the whole world, not Pakistan alone," Gilani said during a visit in Paris.


Pakistani Foreign Secretary Salman Bashir told the BBC on Wednesday that Pakistan had informed the United States as far back as in 2009 about its suspicions of the occupants in the home in Abbottabad. Bin Laden had been living at the compound for at least five years and was killed there early Monday in a raid by U.S. special forces.


"Of course they (the U.S.) have a much more sophisticated equipment to evaluate and to assess," he said as to why Pakistan did not act on its suspicions.


Many Pakistanis believe they know why.


"At the lower level, there are elements within the security establishment who have sympathies with the anti-U.S. extremist forces," said Farooq Tariq, a labor leader in Lahore.


"To say the least, this was a gross inefficiency on the part of our intelligence agencies," said Zaman Khan, a human rights activist.


The home is short walk from the elite Pakistan Military Academy at Kakul, near Abbottabad and not far from a neighborhood where many military families and retired officers live. The Pakistani who owned the compound that was Osama bin Laden's final hideaway had bought up adjoining plots of land over two years and once told a seller that the property he bought for "an uncle" had become very valuable, according to the Associated Press.


Property records obtained by the AP on Wednesday show that a man named Mohammed Arshad bought the land where bin Laden's compound was built between 2004 and 2005 and paid $48,000.


U.S. officials have identified the courier who led the Americans to in Laden as Sheik Abu Ahmed, a Pakistani born in Kuwait. They obtained his name from detainees held in secret CIA prison sites in Eastern Europe and vetted it with top al-Qaeda operatives such as 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the AP reported.


U.S. officials said the courier and his brother were killed in the commando raid on the compound early Monday.


One of bin Laden's daughters, who said she saw U.S. forces shooting her father, is in Pakistani custody, said a Pakistani intelligence official, speaking to the AP on condition of anonymity in line with the agency's policy. At least 10 people, including six or seven children, and a woman, are in Pakistani custody, he said.


For many Pakistanis, it's hard to believe the three-story house with 16-foot-high outer walls unusual for the neighborhood could have remained out of sight of security agencies.


"People were skeptical in this neighborhood about this place and these guys. They used to gossip, say they were smugglers or drug dealers," said farmer Mashood Khan, 45. "People would complain that even with such a big house they didn't invite the poor or distribute charity."


The Pakistani government refuted charges that the house should have tipped it off as a possible terrorist hide-out. "It needs to be appreciated that many houses (in the northwest) have high boundary walls, in line with their culture of privacy and security," the government said. "Houses with such layout and structural details are not a rarity."


Like many towns where the army has a strong presence, the streets of Abbottabad are well-groomed. Street signs tell residents to "Love Pakistan." The city is known for its good schools, including some established by Christian missionaries. Girls wear veils while carrying Hannah Montana backpacks to school.


Many houses in the outlying areas have modern amenities but are located on streets covered with trash. Shepherds herd their flocks of sheep along dusty roads just a few hundred yards from modern banks.


"That house was obviously a suspicious one," said Jahangir Khan, who was buying a newspaper in Abbottabad. "Either it was a complete failure of our intelligence agencies or they were involved in this affair."


Still others say the failure was to permit bin Laden's death.


Thousands of people congregated at funeral prayers for bin Laden held in Karachi and Lahore. Hafiz Saeed, the leader of the outlawed Islamic organization Lashkar-e-Taiba, led the prayers and said bin Laden died a martyr to Islam.


Contributing: Aisha Chowdhry





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Walking dead: Bin Laden lookalike roams Colombian neighborhood

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