Pakistanis: Bin Laden lived in Abbottabad house for 5 years

 

http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2011/05/05/113772/pakistanis-bin-laden-lived-in.h
tml

 

 

ABBOTTABAD, Pakistan - One of Osama bin Laden's wives has told interrogators

that the al Qaida leader and his family, including perhaps as many as three

wives, had lived in this Pakistani resort city for five years when U.S.

special forces stormed the compound shortly before 1 a.m. Monday and shot

him dead, a senior Pakistani military official said Thursday.

 

Pakistani security officials who responded to the raid said that one of the

first sights they encountered as they entered the three-story house after

the U.S. troops had left was a woman who was cradling the head of another

woman in her lap. She looked up and spoke to them in English:

 

"I am Saudi. Osama bin Laden is my father."

 

The wounded woman she was cradling, who'd been shot in the leg, lay quietly,

still conscious. Nearby, another woman had her hands bound behind her back

and her mouth taped closed.

 

Four children were in the house. The youngest was a baby, perhaps 6 or 7

months old, in a cot. There was a child who looked about 3 years old, one

who was 4 or 5 and another who seemed about 6 years old. The older children

had their legs tied together.

 

At the bottom of the staircase on the first floor lay the corpse of a young

man. Pakistani security officials identified the man from a photo circulated

by the Reuters news agency as bin Laden's son Khalid.

 

Three days after helicopter-borne U.S. Navy SEALs swarmed into a walled

compound here, Pakistani security officials began talking about what they

saw when they arrived at the house minutes after the Americans had flown

away, taking bin Laden's body with them.

 

The officials spoke only on the condition of anonymity, saying they'd been

told not to talk to reporters. But with contradictory versions of what took

place emerging in Washington, their cursory accounts provide a lens, even if

imperfect, through which to begin piecing together what unfolded during the

fewer than 40 minutes that American troops were on the ground in the dusty

compound.

 

There were few signs of the firefight that U.S. officials said Monday had

taken place. The Pakistani security officials interviewed Thursday said

they'd noticed no weapons in the house and that the outside of the building

bore no impact scars from bullets.

 

The blood-soaked body of a man who neighbors said had identified himself as

Arshad Khan was found outside a small house near the compound's main

residential building. U.S. officials now say that Arshad Khan, who they

think also used the nom de guerre Abu Ahmed al Kuwaiti, was the courier who

led them to bin Laden and the only member of bin Laden's team to have fired

on the American troops.

 

The man who identified himself to neighbors as Tariq, Arshad's brother, also

was found dead inside the house, though none of the Pakistani security

officials could say precisely where his body lay. A photograph shot by a

Pakistani security official and sold to Reuters shows him face up in a pool

of blood, his eyes open and what seem to be cords from a computer near his

head.

 

Neighbors who saw the gruesome photos Thursday readily identified Arshad and

Tariq as the men they knew who lived in the house.

 

"There's no doubt. This one is Arshad," said a local shopkeeper, Rasheed,

who gave only one name, pointing to the picture of the bulkier man, who

seemed to have a little beard and a moustache. "This one is Tariq," he said

on seeing the photograph of the other man with a moustache.

 

The brothers brought children to Rasheed's shop to buy sweets and soft

drinks, he said. The children, none older than 9, spoke Pashto, the language

spoken by Pakistani Pashtuns, and were presumed to be the children of Arshad

and Tariq.

 

At a tailor shop next door, Shajaat, who also only gave one name, was shown

the pictures and said that these were the two men he'd see emerge from the

house often and walk past his shop, though he didn't know their names.

 

At a ramshackle little house directly opposite bin Laden's, Mohammad Qasim,

a 20-year-old whose father, Shamraiz, was arrested by Pakistani security

personnel immediately after the American raid, also identified Tariq from

the photographs. He said that the picture of Arshad wasn't clear enough for

him to be sure.

 

"Tariq was the one who would bring the children out usually, pretty much

every day, to the shops," Qasim said.

 

None of them, however, could identify the Arab-looking young man in the

third photograph, another bit of evidence that however long they'd lived in

the house, bin Laden and his family had stayed inside the compound, and

perhaps inside the house itself. CIA Director Leon Panetta told a television

interviewer earlier this week in Washington that aerial surveillance of the

house had never captured an image of anyone they could be certain was bin

Laden.

 

A terrace on the top story of the house, with high walls on three sides but

no roof, may have allowed the al Qaida leader and his family to have some

fresh air and sun.

 

The identity of the English-speaking woman is uncertain. On Tuesday, a

Pakistani security official described her as bin Laden's daughter and said

she was 12 or 13.

 

But Pakistanis interviewed Thursday described her as appearing to be about

20, leaving open the possibility that she was another of bin Laden's wives.

A Pakistani intelligence official said Thursday that they'd taken three

wives of bin Laden into custody from the house.

 

The name of one, Amal Ahmed Abdel Fatteh, from Yemen, was made public when

Pakistani television aired a photo of her passport, which was found in the

house.

 

Also unclear is the identity of the woman who was found bound and gagged.

Some accounts suggested that she was a doctor who was there to attend to the

ailing bin Laden, while others suggested she was a maid.

 

U.S. officials have said they think a woman was shot and killed at the

house, but none of the Pakistanis interviewed recalled seeing a woman's

body.

 

Pakistan has offered no detailed official version of what took place at the

house or what authorities have learned from questioning its occupants. The

information on the three wives came from a briefing for selected Pakistani

journalists at the military's headquarters in Rawalpindi, a senior military

official said.

 

Separately, a statement from the Pakistan military Thursday showed how badly

the U.S. operation has ruptured relations with Islamabad, which appeared

either incompetent or complicit, given the location of bin Laden's home in a

mainstream part of the country, near military installations. Pakistan wasn't

warned about the operation on its soil.

 

Army chief Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani told a meeting of top commanders that

"any similar action, violating the sovereignty of Pakistan, will warrant a

review on the level of military/intelligence cooperation with the United

States." As a first step, Kayani decided, according to the statement, to

reduce the number of American military "to the minimum essential."

 

(Shah is a McClatchy special correspondent.)

 

Read more:

http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2011/05/05/113772/pakistanis-bin-laden-lived-in.h

tml#ixzz1LWsris87

 



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