Bin Laden Aides Are Said to Have Bought Pepsi, Coke in Bulk

May 03, 2011, 4:03 PM EDT

http://www.businessweek.com/news/2011-05-03/bin-laden-aides-are-said-to-have
-bought-pepsi-coke-in-bulk.html

 

By Anwar Shakir

 

May 4 (Bloomberg) -- The two polite Pakistanis who helped Osama bin Laden

hide in the shadow of their country's army bought bulk food orders, chose

major brands and equally favored Pepsi and Coke, neighbors and a local

shopkeeper said.

 

Rashid and Akbar Khan owned the fortified residence where U.S. commandos

killed bin Laden in an early morning raid May 2, and did the daily shopping

in the Pashtu-language accents of Waziristan, a region on the Afghan border,

said grocer Anjum Qaisar, 27, who works 150 meters from the compound. Bin

Laden's men "never came by foot, they always drove a Pajero or a little

Suzuki van, and they bought enough food for 10 people," Qaisar said in an

interview yesterday.

 

"I was curious about why they bought so much food, but I did not want to be

rude by asking" such a personal question, Qaisar said. The Khans told

neighbors they had fled a violent tribal feud in Waziristan to seek a calmer

life in Abbottabad, an army headquarters town 50 kilometers (30 miles) from

the capital, Islamabad.

 

A day after the gun battle that revealed bin Laden's presence, his former

neighbors expressed astonishment that the al-Qaeda leader had hidden among

them, just a mile from the gate of the Pakistan Military Academy, the

country's equivalent of West Point in the U.S. Eight days before U.S.

helicopters swooped in, Pakistan's army chief General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani

visited the academy, telling its cadets the "Pakistan army is fully aware of

internal and external threats to the country," an army statement said last

week.

 

Support Network

 

The U.S. will investigate whether bin Laden's support network included

Pakistani officials, White House counter- terrorism adviser John Brennan

said on NBC's Today show. Abbottabad's district government chief, Zahir

ul-Islam, said in an interview that local officials would not comment on

that issue or on the fate of several women and children from the house that

local residents said were taken to a hospital and then detained by

authorities.

 

As Qaisar and other neighbors traded stories of bin Laden's household and

the U.S. raid, Pakistani troops controlled access into Bilal Town, their

neighborhood of new, walled villas interspersed with farm plots where bin

Laden's 1.5-acre compound was the biggest. Qaisar was one of few merchants

who braved the checkpoints to open for business yesterday.

 

Bin Laden's protectors "always bought the best brands -- Nestle milk, the

good-quality soaps and shampoos," Qaisar said. "They always paid cash, never

asked for credit." They purchased meat from a butcher nearby who stayed

closed yesterday, he said.

 

'Impressive Amount'

 

Rashid and Akbar owned the compound, said Kamar Khan, a police official who

sealed the house yesterday. He declined to say whether the men had been

killed in the battle with U.S. commandos.

 

The U.S. commando team collected an "impressive amount" of materials from

the compound, including computers and other electronics, CIA Director Leon

Panetta told Time magazine.

 

Michael Scheuer, the CIA veteran who led the agency's hunt for bin Laden in

the 1990s, said it would be a surprise to find that the al-Qaeda leader, a

Saudi, had relied on foreigners like the Khans for his innermost security.

 

"Historically, anyone that close to him almost always was an Arab rather

than a Pakistani or an Afghan," Scheuer said in a May 2 phone interview from

Washington.

 

Previous Escape

 

Bin Laden escaped U.S. surveillance about 90 days after the September 11

attacks in 2001, as troops closed in on him in the Tora Bora mountains on

Afghanistan's border with Pakistan. The CIA found evidence of him last

August in Abbottabad, a military town in the Himalayan foothills that is

favored by Pakistani army retirees and named for its founder, a 19th-century

British major, James Abbott.

 

Neighbors in Bilal Town knew that Arabic-speaking women "lived inside that

house because our children heard them through the gate one day and told us,"

said Altaf Khan, 35, whose house is on the same street.

 

Still, at least some of bin Laden's guards were ethnic Pashtuns, the group

whom bin Laden befriended by joining their war against Soviet occupation in

Afghanistan in the 1980s, said Amin Akbar, the nearest neighbor to the

al-Qaeda house.

 

"They had very powerful security lights at night," Akbar said. "When I saw

them on one day last month, I knocked on the gate to tell them so they could

turn them off, because our electricity is so expensive."

 

A Pakistani opened the door "and became very angry with me," he said. "He

asked me 'Who told you to come here?'"

 

Umar Nassir, a teenage student, said neighbors are concerned that bin

Laden's refuge in Abbottabad may bring more trouble. "The schools in the

city have been closed for three days," he said. "We worry that al-Qaeda will

come back to attack in our town and take revenge for Osama's death."

 

--With assistance from James Rupert in New Delhi. Editors: Mark Williams,

Peter Hirschberg

 



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