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Peace at any cost is a Prelude to War!

Al-Qaida Fighters Try to Escape Guards
At Least 13 Killed in Clash Along Pakistan Border

By RIAZ KHAN
.c The Associated Press

PESHAWAR, Pakistan (Dec. 19) - Dozens of fighters from Osama bin Laden's
al-Qaida group, arrested as they crossed the border from Afghanistan, rose up
against their Pakistani guards Wednesday, seized weapons and escaped. Seven
al-Qaida fighters and six police were killed, officials said.

After a brief and bloody gunbattle in the morning, Pakistani tribal forces
and army helicopter gunships pursued the fugitives, capturing 21. As night
fell, they were searching for 20 more in the mountainous border region,
officials said.

The al-Qaida fighters - mostly Arabs - were from among 156 arrested over the
past two days as they came across the border, the government of Northwest
Frontier Province said in a statement. Just on the other side of the
frontier, Afghan forces backed by U.S. airstrikes drove al-Qaida followers
from their mountain base in Tora Bora in recent days, sending many fleeing
into Pakistan.

Hundreds of al-Qaida - including some top commanders - were allowed to escape
by commanders in the Afghan eastern alliance that led the assault on Tora
Bora, an alliance official said. Two alliance commanders have been rebuked
for conniving to let bin Laden followers flee into Pakistan, the official
said.

In Tora Bora, the search continued for remaining al-Qaida members or clues to
the whereabouts of bin Laden. U.S. helicopters ran night missions through the
mountain valleys, while Afghan fighters brought more prisoners and documents
from a sweep of snow-laden cave hide-outs.

The prisoner revolt took place near the northwestern Pakistani town of
Parachinar. The prisoners, held in the town overnight, were being transferred
in a convoy of buses and trucks to a larger facility, the provincial
government said.

''One of the Arabs shouted 'Allahu Akbar!' (Arabic for ''God is great'') and
with that slogan, the others attacked,'' bus driver Rehman Ali told The
Associated Press. He said they seized guns from the six guards on the bus and
shot them dead. Three prisoners were killed in the struggle.

Ali said the prisoners tried to drive the bus away, but lost control and it
overturned. The fighters poured out and engaged security guards from the
other buses in a firefight, he said. Three more prisoners were killed and one
was wounded, and seven police were wounded, he said.

The provincial government said a total of seven Arabs and six security
officials were killed. Their reports could not be reconciled. The government
said 48 al-Qaida men were on the bus.

Tribal security officials and soldiers went after them, using ground troops
and helicopter gunships, catching 21, and throwing a security cordon over the
area to search for the rest, the provincial government said.

Last month, al-Qaida forces in northern Afghanistan revolted the day after
their capture, sparking a three-day battle at the fortress near
Mazar-e-Sharif where they were being held. A CIA operative, Johnny ''Mike''
Spann was killed, as were dozens of guards and hundreds of prisoners.

Pakistan has poured helicopters and thousands of soldiers into the tribal
areas along the border and set up 300 checkpoints to cut off escape routes
from Tora Bora. Pakistan earlier said it had arrested at least 108 fighters
fleeing the area, including at least 60 Arabs and other non-Afghans.

Britain announced that it had offered to the United Nations to lead a
multinational peacekeeping force in Afghanistan and to commit 1,500 troops.
Defense Secretary Geoff Hoon told Parliament that the exact composition of
the force - which could number 3,000-5,000 troops - will be resolved in the
coming days.

A vanguard of 200 British soldiers could move from Bagram airport to the
Afghan capital, Kabul, in time for Saturday's inauguration of a six-month
interim government. The U.N. Security Council was poised to approve the
force, possibly by Thursday, after key council members agreed the troops
would be authorized to use military force if necessary.

The appointed Afghan leader, Hamid Karzai, said Wednesday bin Laden should be
turned over international justice, if caught - a call echoed by the top U.N.
war crimes prosecutor. But the United States insisted it must try the man
wanted for the Sept. 11 terror attacks.

''A man like that who has committed crimes worldwide must be given to
international justice,'' Karzai said in Rome after receiving the blessing of
the 87-year-old former Afghan King Mohammad Zaher Shah.

In Tora Bora, the whereabouts of bin Laden remained a mystery, as the capture
of more of his followers brought new rumors.

An Afghan alliance commander said a few non-Afghan fighters were captured
overnight without resistance, and more stragglers were expected to surrender
as the weather turns colder and the snow deepens.

Some captives ''are telling us stories about Osama giving a speech 14 days
ago and then leaving, but these men are not very credible,'' Afta Gul, a
commander of the eastern tribal forces, said. ''I have heard that Osama has
shaved his beard and gone to Pakistan, but no one can say for sure.''

Hulking black U.S. helicopters took off repeatedly after dark Tuesday and
before dawn Wednesday, flying without lights up the valley leading to the
warren of caves. The special forces troops assigned to comb the area refused
to speak to reporters.

B-52 bombers and EP3 Orion reconnaissance aircraft droned overhead, but no
ordnance was dropped.

Afghan fighters returned to their base with piles of maps and Arabic-language
documents from caves they searched Tuesday, including a topographical map
marking mortar positions and their field of fire, and a training manual on
aiming tank fire.

Meanwhile, a top alliance official said the eastern alliance's governing
council, or shura, met in Jalalabad on Friday and rebuked two senior tribal
leaders who some shura members accused of helping al-Qaida fighters flee Tora
Bora.

Hundreds of al-Qaida family members escaped, and top al-Qaida commanders may
have been among them, said the offical, who attended the meeting and spoke on
condition of anonymity for fear of retribution.

Pakistan dismissed allegations that its authorities also protected al-Qaida
fugitives.

At a U.S. Marine base at Kandahar airport in southern Afghanistan, FBI agents
prepared to question 15 al-Qaida and Taliban captives.

FBI agent Thomas K. Knowles said none of the 15 were among the 22 on the U.S.
list of most wanted terrorists. ''They are young fighters,'' he said. ''We
are still trying to figure out who we want to talk to, who has information.''

Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz has said the 15 were picked for
questioning out of thousands held by Afghan forces because they are suspected
of having ''important information and might be themselves senior people.''

Five more captives were being interrogated on board the USS Peleliu,
including an American and an Australian who fought with the Taliban. The
other three were either Taliban or al-Qaida.

One was believed to be Abdul Aziz, a Saudi Arabian official of the Wafa
humanitarian organization, a U.S. official said on condition of anonymity.
The group's assets have been frozen by the Bush administration for alleged
terrorist ties.

 AP-NY-12-19-01 1432EST


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