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Friday,
September 21, 2001
Clerics
ask bin Laden to leave
Statement sets no deadline and includes a threat
of jihad, holy war
By Amir Shah
Associated Press
KABUL,
Afghanistan Facing the prospect of U.S. attacks, Islamic
clerics urged Osama bin Laden to leave Afghanistan. The United
States said the call Thursday fell short of its demands, and
a Taliban official acknowledged the alleged terrorist mastermind
might have problems finding another nation willing to accept
him.
The
clerics statement, issued at the end of a two-day meeting
of the Ulema, or council of religious leaders, set no deadline
for bin Laden to depart and included a warning of a jihad,
or holy war, against the United States if its forces attacked
this impoverished country.
And
in a statement issued late Thursday through its embassy in
Islamabad, Pakistan, the Taliban government repeated its stand
that it would not force bin Laden to leave because that would
be an insult to Islam.
Nevertheless,
the clerics statement represented the first sign that
some figures in Afghan leadership wanted to compromise on
the previous hard-line stance against any move to surrender
bin Laden, the chief suspect in the Sept. 11 terror attacks
in the United States.
This
Ulema council requests the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan
to persuade Osama bin Laden to leave Afghanistan and select
a new place for himself, the clerical statement said.
In
Washington, the Bush administration dismissed the clerics
decision.
We
want action, not just statements, Secretary of State
Colin Powell said. He said bin Laden must be surrendered and
not given continued haven in Afghanistan or any other country.
The
sooner he leaves and is brought to justice, the better off
I think the world will be, Powell said in Washington.
The United States has also insisted that bin Ladens
training camps be closed and his hundreds of followers driven
out of Afghanistan.
The
government of Pakistan, which has offered U.S. forces access
to its air space and land in an attack on its fellow Muslim
neighbor, refused to comment on the clerics action.
We have not received an authoritative version of the
decision, so we are not in a position to respond, Mohammed
Riaz Khan, the Foreign Ministry spokesman, told reporters
in Islamabad, the Pakistani capital.
Despite
the clerical statement, a senior Afghan government official
in Kabul said it could take bin Laden a long time to decide
where he will go. No government could accept bin Laden without
risking economic and political isolation as well as a possible
U.S. attack.
That
would effectively limit his options to places like Chechnya,
Somalia or northern Yemen all of which are largely
under the control of warlords.
Osama
has many enemies, and he must find an appropriate place to
go. This is a big task, and it needs time. It must happen
slowly, Education Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi said. The
United States must not set itself and the Afghans on fire.
The
Taliban, a devoutly Muslim religious militia that controls
about 95 percent of the country, have allowed bin Laden to
live in Afghanistan for the last five years after the government
of Sudan pressured him to leave. The Taliban leadership say
they are able to convey information to bin Laden through radio
communication with Taliban security personnel who travel with
him.
In
Egypt, Diaa Rashwan, a Cairo-based expert on Islamic activism,
said bin Laden may already have left Afghanistan, secretly
fleeing to a nearby Central Asian republic during the clerics
meeting.
One
possibility could be Tajikistan, where he could hide with
supporters. But Fahmi Howeidi, another Cairo-based expert,
said bin Laden would have a big problem there
because Afghani opposition figures are ethnic Tajik.
Howeidi
described the clerics action as a cunning move.
... Now the ball is in the American court.
It
seems that the Pakistani threat was strong. Taliban cannot
continue (to exist) without Pakistani support, he said.
On
Wednesday, Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar, who is believed
to have the final decision-making power, said the militia
was willing to meet with U.S. officials, but he also accused
Washington of unfairly vilifying bin Laden.
In
a speech read at the opening of the clerics meeting,
Omar denounced the United States portrayal of bin Ladens
alleged role in the attacks on the World Trade Center and
the Pentagon. He called the U.S. actions an effort to harm
the Taliban.
Osama
has denied his involvement. It is unfortunate that America
does not listen to us and levels all sorts of charges and
threatens military action, Omar said. We have
held talks in . . . the past with U.S. governments several
times, and we are ready for more talks.
The
Bush administration rejected that offer, too.
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