News APP

NewsApp (Free)

Read news as it happens
Download NewsApp

Available on  gplay

This article was first published 12 years ago
Home  » News » Osama's compound in Abbottabad demolished

Osama's compound in Abbottabad demolished

Source: PTI
February 25, 2012 23:03 IST
Get Rediff News in your Inbox:
The compound in the garrison town of Abbottabad where Osama bin Laden was killed by the United States special forces last year was demolished by Pakistani authorities on Saturday night amidst tight security, local residents said.

Heavy machinery and cranes were moved to the compound, located about 800 yards from the elite Pakistan Military Academy, on Saturday evening as security agencies closed all roads leading to the house in Bilal Town, local residents told the media.

Powerful spotlights were put up and a large number of security personnel, including army soldiers, were deployed in the area before the demolition began at around 9 pm. "Osama compound at Bilal Town in Abbottabad city has been dismantled," state-run Radio Pakistan announced on Twitter.

The private Geo News channel reported that authorities first tore down the room on third floor where the world's most wanted man was gunned down by US Navy Seals.

Local residents and reporters said authorities had directed people living in houses near the compound not to go out on their rooftops.

Dunya News channel aired grainy footage of a section of a balcony of the three-storey building being demolished. The Pakistani military had taken control of the compound shortly after the Al Qaeda chief was killed in a pre-dawn raid by US troops on May 2 last year.

There were rumours on at least two occasions in the past that the compound would be demolished so that it did not become a shrine for jihadists.

The media was given limited access to the compound after it was briefly handed over to local police by the army for a few days in May last year. However, soldiers were redeployed at the site and people were barred from approaching it.

Pakistani intelligence agencies had thoroughly searched the compound before giving American officials limited access to it last year.

Media reports had said that the Central Intelligence Agency maintained a safe house for a small team of spies who conducted extensive surveillance on the compound over a period of months.

In the past, Pakistani security agencies had demolished Jamia Hafsa, a seminary affiliated to the radical Lal Masjid in Islamabad, after a military operation in the mosque in 2007.

The walls of bin Laden's compound were higher and thicker than those of every house in Bilal Town. The compound consisted of three portions -- a big open area for farming, a built up structure and a lawn on the north side that was smaller than the farming area.

There was no other compound of the same size in the area. The land for the compound was bought by Arshad Khan, one of two Al Qaeda couriers killed with bin Laden.

The house's gas and electricity connections too were in his name. Arshad Khan and his brother Tariq Khan were tribesmen and belonged to the Wazir tribe of South Waziristan Agency bordering Afghanistan.

Noor Mohammad, the contractor who built the compound in 2005, said Arshad Khan had paid him Rs 7,50,000 for the project.

For Rediff Realtime News click here 

Get Rediff News in your Inbox:
Source: PTI© Copyright 2024 PTI. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of PTI content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent.