Osama bin Laden's secret compound is DEMOLISHED in Pakistan 10 months after deadly SEAL team raid
By REPORTER MydeaMedia
The three-storey Pakistan compound where Osama bin Laden spent his last years and was killed by U.S Navy SEALs last May is being demolished.
Rings of police kept spectators and journalists away from the compound, which the government began tearing down on Saturday night under powerful flood lights without providing prior notice.
Three mechanized backhoes ripped into the building, and large trucks carried away the debris, according to an Associated Press reporter who was able to get close enough to see the work.
Work begins: Pakistani security personnel start the demolition of the compound where Osama bin Laden was killed in May 2011
Bin Laden's lair: Local residents watch as the compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, where the al Qaeda leader spent his last days is slowly demolished
Pakistan was outraged by the covert American raid in the northwestern town of Abbottabad because it was not informed beforehand - a decision the U.S. explained was driven by concerns that someone in the government might tip off bin Laden.
The terror leader's death was cheered across the globe, but many Pakistanis were angry that the U.S. violated its territory and that its troops were powerless to stop American soldiers from attacking a compound located next to the country's elite military academy.
The backhoes - heavy machines with strong crane-like digging arms - have torn down the tall boundary walls around bin Laden's compound and have destroyed more than half of the main building, where the al-Qaida chief lived for years with his wives and children.
Army soldiers who were guarding the compound Saturday night handed authority over to the police in the morning and left. Work continued Sunday morning but halted around midday for unknown reasons.
Pakistani officials have declined to say why they decided to begin demolition.
Residents of the normally sleepy town of Abbottabad were divided on what the government should do with the compound in the aftermath of the raid. Some thought it should be destroyed, but others believed it should be turned into a tourist attraction to help the town earn money. There was always the danger, however, that it could also draw al-Qaida supporters.
Pulled down: The destruction of the building brings an end to the a stain on Pakistan's history and remained a start remainder of the al Qaeda leader and in turn the atrocities committed on 9/11
The three-storey compound, pictured, where Osama bin Laden spent his last years and was killed by U.S commandos is being demolished
American officials said they buried bin Laden's body at sea to avoid giving his followers a burial place that could become a makeshift shrine.
Many U.S. officials expressed disbelief that bin Laden could have lived in Abbottabad for around six years without the Pakistani government knowing. But the U.S. has not found any evidence that senior Pakistani officials knew of the al-Qaida chief's whereabouts.
The U.S. Navy SEALs who attacked bin Laden's compound on May 2 infiltrated by helicopter from neighboring Afghanistan. The raid, which lasted around 40 minutes, was a serious blow to the already troubled U.S.-Pakistan relationship.
Pakistan responded by kicking out more than 100 U.S. troops training Pakistanis in counterterrorism operations and reduced the level of intelligence cooperation.
Some members of Congress called on the U.S. to cut of the billions of dollars of military and civilian aid to Pakistan unless Islamabad explained bin Laden's presence in Abbottabad and boosted cooperation on the Afghan war. The aid has continued, although at a somewhat lower level.
Inside the compound: A detailed image shows Osama Bin Laden in his Abbottabad compound surrounded by TVs, a PC, digital decoder and a boster pillow
This well-known image captures the moment President Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and members of the national security team saw bin Laden's compound raised and him killed live .
MydeaMedia@ 2012
No comments:
Post a Comment