-Caveat Lector-

if this article doesn't show to you that there is much
more to this war than meets the eye...nothing will

http://news.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;$sessionid$IBREZLAAACBTFQFIQMGSFFOAVCBQWIV0?xml=/news/2001/11/18/wafg18.xml&sSheet=/news/2001/11/18/ixhome.html

Al-Qa'eda massacre Taliban
By David Harrison in Kunduz, northern Afghanistan
(Filed: 18/11/2001)


OSAMA BIN LADEN'S elite al-Qa'eda guard, mainly Arabs
and Pakistanis, are slaughtering Taliban troops to
prevent them surrendering to the Northern Alliance
army besieging Kunduz, the Taliban-controlled northern
enclave.

In the first eye-witness accounts of life inside the
city, escaping civilians last night told The Telegraph
that an Arab al-Qa'eda commander had ordered the
massacre of 150 Afghan Talibs who wanted to defect.

As alliance commanders prepared for their latest
offensive on Kunduz, refugees described atrocities
committed by al-Qa'eda militiamen.

Mohammed Ibrahim, 50, who escaped from the city
yesterday, said: "A commander who was foreign gave the
order for 150 local Afghan Taliban to be killed
because they wanted to surrender. They showed them no
mercy."

He said the massacre took place on Friday and followed
the defection of 1,000 Afghan Talibs under Gen Mirai
Nasery, a local commander. Al-Qa'eda soldiers had
arrested more than 100 prominent Kunduz citizens and
were holding them hostage to stall an alliance attack.

Mr Ibrahim said the Taliban leadership and al-Qa'eda
were also refusing to allow civilians to leave.

He said: "All the shops are closed and the streets are
deserted except for the Taliban soldiers walking
around with their guns. The people are terrified. They
are trapped in their homes and too frightened to go
out."

Mr Ibrahim said that the Taliban and al-Qa'eda were
forcing local men to fight for them, and beating or
killing them if they refused. Some civilians were
using this as a means of escape, agreeing to go to the
front line then running away when night fell.

Details of the Kunduz massacre came as alliance forces
consolidated their grip on areas of the country
captured from the Taliban last week.

There were reports that Mullah Mohammed Omar, the
Taliban supreme leader, was trying to negotiate
guarantees for his own safety and the safety of his
fighters in their last remaining stronghold of
Kandahar before surrendering.

Earlier claims that the Taliban were fleeing the city
proved to be premature, and large numbers of fighters
are still believed to be based there. They vowed not
to give up without a fight.

Negotiations over their fate took place as final
preparations were being made for the deployment of up
to 4,000 British troops in Afghanistan. At least 680
members of 2 Para are expected in the region later
this week.

Special forces troops hunting bin Laden believe that
they are now closing in on him. Last night a Ministry
of Defence official said that special forces were
"only hours" behind bin Laden as he fled from one
hideout to another.

Military commanders are convinced that he is
constantly on the move in the mountains of southern
Afghanistan, despite Taliban claims that he had
slipped over the border into Pakistan.

The Qatar-based al-Jazeera television station quoted
the Taliban envoy to Pakistan, Mullah Abdul Salam
Zaeef, as saying that bin Laden had left Afghanistan
"with his wives and children" for an unspecified
destination.

Mr Zaeef, however, later told reporters that bin Laden
was still in Afghanistan and that his exact location
was unknown. Mr Zaeef was speaking after crossing the
border into Pakistan from visiting Kandahar.

A Pentagon spokesman said that the United States
military had no evidence that bin Laden had left
Afghanistan and was still hunting him.

Taliban officials dismissed reports that Omar had
ordered the Taliban to retreat from Kandahar and head
for the hills. Last night the Afghan Islamic Press
said the Taliban, facing a popular uprising even among
fellow Pathans in the south, had agreed to leave the
city and hand over control to two former mujahideen
commanders.

Meanwhile Burhanuddi Rabbani, the former president
ousted by the Taliban five years ago, returned to
Kabul, where the alliance was reported to have said
that it did not want foreign troops in the country.
One senior alliance commander insisted that most of
Britain's 100 special forces must be immediately
withdrawn, claiming that they had arrived at Bagram
air base without consultation.

A Ministry of Defence spokesman said, however, that
the British troops would not leave Bagram and said the
mission was not in doubt.

He said: "We can confirm that we have not had any such
approach from the Northern Alliance leadership. We
have spoken to our people in Kabul and they say there
are no difficulties with the presence."

Alliance forces committed a series of atrocities when
they ran the country during the 1992-96 civil war. The
fear of a return to bloodletting has prompted some
countries to discuss the prospects for a peacekeeping
mission.

Mr Rabbani, who still holds Afghanistan's UN seat, is
unpopular even within some factions of the alliance.
Many anti-Taliban groups want the deposed former King
Zahir Shah, in exile in Rome, to be the figurehead of
a new regime rather than Mr Rabbani.

Mr Rabbani said: "We have not come to Kabul to extend
our government. We came to Kabul for peace. We are
preparing the ground to invite peace groups and all
Afghan intellectuals abroad who are working for the
peace."



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http://www.bilderberg.org/cia.htm

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