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U.S. jets hit Taliban compound but Omar 'safe'
ISLAMABAD, NOV. 28. The U.S. jets struck a potentially
devastating blow on a compound believed to have housed the
Taliban's supreme leader, Mr. Mullah Mohammad Omar, near the
militia's last bastion, Kandahar, amid the Northern Alliance
claim that it had crushed a bloody rebellion by prisoners in
northern Afghanistan.
As more Marines poured into the war-ravaged country, the U.S.-led
forces narrowed the search for the Saudi fugitive, Osama bin
Laden, and his supporters around Kandahar and Jalalabad.
The U.S. Defence Secretary, Mr. Donald Rumsfeld, said the strike
was ordered yesterday against the ``leadership compound'' after
learning that it was being used by senior Taliban leaders, the
Al-Qaeda and the Wafa, a Saudi group suspected of aiding Osama.
The CNN quoted the Pentagon sources as saying that the U.S.
planes struck two known Taliban facilities around 1.30 a.m.
(local time) after information was received that Mr. Mullah Omar
was inside one of them. The pilots reported ``good hits'' on both
but the extent of damage was not known.
``Whoever was there is gonna wish they were not,'' said Mr.
Rumsfeld, who watched the attack live from the headquarters of
the U.S. Central Command in Florida.
However, the Taliban's chief envoy, Mr. Abdul Salam Zaeef, told
the Afghan Islamic Press news agency that the bombing was
southwest of Kandahar and had hit the house of a local official.
``Neither the Taliban supreme leader nor any Taliban official was
there,'' he said. Mullah Omar was ``safe, '' he said, but denied
having any idea of where Osama was.
Meanwhile, in Mazar-e-Sharif, the Northern Alliance fighters,
using knives and scissors cut away black scarves from the bound
hands of some of the corpses of Taliban fighters killed during a
violent three-day revolt before laying out the bodies for the Red
Cross to haul away. The Alliance officials allowed reporters on
Wednesday into the fort.
The scene at the Qalai Janghi complex was one of almost complete
devastation. Heavy fighting erupted on Sunday when hundreds of
Pakistanis, Chechens, Arabs and other non-Afghans who had fought
with the Taliban were brought to the fortress after the surrender
of Kunduz.
Gen. Rashid Dostum, a senior Alliance commander, warned
journalists to stay away from the southern section of the fort
where the prisoners had been held, including the field with the
bodies, which were then carried to a central courtyard where the
Red Cross took charge of them. Its workers, wearing rubber gloves
loaded the corpses brought by the Alliance troops on to trailers
attached to tractors.
There were ``two dangerous people'' still at large, Gen. Dostum
said. They ``may be lying among the corpses. They are suicidal
people and one can expect anything from them.'' Denying that his
forces had tied the hands of the prisoners behind their backs,
the General said ``we did not tie them. We brought them here to
be safer... We treated prisoners according to human rights.''
He claimed that the revolt started after a grenade attack by
Taliban prisoners killed two of his best generals. Another
general was sent on Sunday to assure the prisoners that they
would be treated well. ``But they once again attacked my
general.''
In London, the Amnesty International called on Tuesday for an
inquiry into the uprising.
CIA officer killed
A report from Washington said a CIA officer, Johnny ``Mike''
Spann, was killed in the prison riot. He was the first American
known to be killed in action inside the country since the U.S.
bombing began, the CIA said on Wednesday.
Journalist kidnapped
Meanwhile in Spin Boldak, the Taliban kidnapped and threatened to
kill a Canadian freelance journalist, Mr. Ken Hetchman. He is
being kept in a small cell bound, Mr. Jonathan Steele of
Britain's Guardian newspaper said.
- AP, AFP
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