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[Gulbuddin Hekmatyar was the CIA's favorite among the
leaders of the Peshawar Seven mujahedin alliance based
in Pakistan in the 1980s and early 1990s.
As well as being the major benefiary of the
US-Saudi-Pakistan created international network based
around Osama bin Laden.
He received the lion's share of US, English, French
and German military and logistical aid as well as the
fawning admiration of the very humanitarian
intervention crew that subsequently cheered on the war
against Yugoslavia and who now celebrate the war
against Afghanistan...and Gulbuddin Hekmatyar.
Not to mention gaining the personal friendship of the
Western press corps.
All of whom, of course, oppose terrorism.
The West's current campaign against its erstwhile hero
and asset has as its real purpose to establish some
tenuous link between 'terrorists' and Iran.]


Hundreds Arrested in Afghan Plot 
By Paul Haven
Associated Press Writer
Thursday, April 4, 2002; 10:06 AM 
KABUL, Afghanistan �� Hundreds of people linked to a
hard-line Islamic group have been arrested in Kabul in
connection with an alleged plot to overthrow the
government of interim Prime Minister Hamid Karzai and
attack foreigners, Afghan officials said Thursday.
The plot, the most serious threat yet to Karzai's
fledgling administration, included plans to set off
bombs throughout the capital, said Gen. Din Muhammad
Jurat, the director general for security at the
Interior Ministry. He said most of those arrested were
members of Hezb-e-Islami, a hard-line Islamic group
headed by former prime minister Gulbuddin Hekmatyar.
"They wanted to launch a coup d'etat against the
government," said Mohammed Naseer, the security
director at the Kabul governor's office. He said the
suspects also wanted to disrupt the loya jirga, a
political gathering planned for June to select a new
Afghan government.
Interior Minister Yunus Qanooni said the goal of the
plotters was still under investigation, but that the
suspects were engaged in the planning of "terrorism,
abductions and sabotage." He said authorities had
seized explosives and remote control devices and found
"written documents indicating that they would carry
out these acts." He did not elaborate
When asked if the plotters planned to assassinate
Karzai, Qanooni said: "There were a series of attacks
planned against a number of prominent Afghan
individuals, including Chairman Karzai and the former
king," Mohammad Zaher Shah, who is due to return to
Afghanistan from Italy later this month. Qanooni added
that authorities had evidence the men planned to
attack foreigners.
The roundups could heighten tensions between Pashtuns,
Afghanistan's largest ethnic group, and the northern
alliance, which is dominated by ethnic Tajiks and
which controls the interior and other key ministries.
Hekmatyar's following is largely Pashtun, and Pashtun
leaders may interpret the arrests as an attempt to
stifle their moves toward Pashtun unity in advance of
the loya jirga.
When asked if most of those arrested were Pashtuns,
Qanooni said only: "Let's not turn it into an ethnic
issue."
Qanooni said more than 300 people had been arrested,
and that 160 were still being held Thursday. A Western
official in Kabul, speaking on condition of anonymity,
said only 10 of those detained were being held on
suspicion of serious offenses, including terrorism.
Lt. Col. Neal Peckham, a spokesman for the
International Security Assistance Force peacekeepers,
said weapons had been found and that those arrested
also included Pakistani members of another militant
group, the Jamaat-e-Islami, a Pakistan Islamic
organization with close ties to Hekmatyar. He said the
peacekeepers were not involved in the operations, but
had been tipped off beforehand.
Afghan police on Monday raided the home of Hekmatyar's
one-time aide, Wahidullah Sabaoon, but there was some
confusion Thursday over his whereabouts. Jurat and
Naseer said Sabaoon was among those arrested in the
sweep, but Peckham said the man was still at large.
Sabaoon was once the military chief of Hezb-e-Islami
and served as Afghanistan's defense minister in 1995
when Hekmatyar became prime minister under President
Burhanuddin Rabbani. When the Taliban took over the
country in 1996, Sabaoon allied himself with the
northern alliance resistance, becoming the finance
minister for the goverment-in-exile.
Hekmatyar has been a vocal opponent of Karzai and of
U.S. presence on Afghan soil, but last month his
deputy, Jumma Khan Hamdard, said the party was ready
to cooperate with the interim administration.
A senior leader of Hezb-e-Islami, Qutbuddin Hilal,
said those arrested were former members of the group.
"There is no truth in these reports that our men are
being arrested," Hilal said.
Ruthless power struggles among Hekmatyar's forces and
northern alliance factions devastated much of Kabul
during the early 1990s, with 50,000 people, mostly
civilians, killed, according to the International Red
Cross.
Hekmatyar fled to Iran after the Taliban took the
capital in 1996, although the Iranian government
recently closed his offices in Tehran and his
whereabouts are unknown.
Naseer said the men arrested "were linked to both
al-Qaida and Gulbuddin Hekmatyar," but he refused to
elaborate. He said most of those arrested were living
in the upscale Wazir Akhbar Khan and Old Makrorayan
neighborhoods of central Kabul.
Jurat said the interim administration had documents
and strong evidence that linked Hekmatyar to the plot,
but made no mention of al-Qaida, Osama bin Laden's
terrorist network. 


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