U.S. wants Bin Laden

Published: 11 November 1999 y., Thursday
Afghanistan_s ruling Taliban army on Tuesday threatened unspecified action against the United States if economic sanctions were imposed for its refusal to hand over suspected terrorist Osama bin Laden. In a letter to the "people of the United States," the Taliban_s reclusive leader, Mullah Mohammed Omar, warned of "surprises" if a U.N. resolution calling for the U.S.-endorsed sanctions were carried out. The letter did not elaborate on the type of action Afghanistan would take. Afghanistan must hand over bin Laden by Sunday or face economic sanctions. Omar urged U.S. citizens to intervene with their government to prevent the sanctions, or risk the consequences. "If you do not take a step in this direction then you will be surprised about what is coming to you and you will not be able to do anything about it," Omar said in the letter, which was received by The Associated Press in neighboring Pakistan.
The United States has alleged that bin Laden masterminded last year_s attacks on two U.S. embassies in East Africa. He has been placed on the FBI_s 10 Most Wanted List, and the U.S. administration has offered a $5 million for information leading to his arrest.
The Clinton administration said it was the threat seriously. "This is a United Nations resolution that has the backing of the Security Council and the international community," said National Security Spokesman David Leavy. "What we are talking about is a threat that Mr. bin Laden poses not only to the interests to the United States but the international community." Leavy said he had not seen the letter.
Šaltinis: MSNBC
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

UKRAINIAN PREMIER VISITS MOSCOW

Russia and Ukraine are to sign a number of agreements in December, in particular, on the simplified border crossing regime more »

The Bulgarian President`s visit

AZERBAIJAN PRESIDENT ILHAM ALIYEV AND PRESIDENT OF BULGARIA GEORGI PARVANOV more »

Russia's Auditing Chamber Demands Soviet Property Reimbursed

The three post-Soviet Baltic countries-Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia-are to pay to Russia stale debts for former Soviet property, insists Russia's Auditing Chamber more »

Iran vows not to pursue nuclear weapons

Iranian President Mohammad Khatami said Wednesday his country will not pursue nuclear weapons but will strive for the right to utilize atomic energy for peaceful purposes more »

US vetoes draft on Israeli withdrawal from Gaza

The United States killed with its veto power on Tuesday another Arab draft UN Security Council resolution more »

Abkhazia set to elect new leader

A hard-nosed nationalist is expected to emerge as leader of the breakaway Georgian region of Abkhazia more »

OSCE rejects observers proposed by CIS Executive Committee

The OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) has rejected the candidate observers proposed by the CIC Executive Committee more »

The Questionnaire

EC PRESIDENT ROMANO PRODI HANDS OVER EC QUESTIONNAIRE FOR MACEDONIA more »

Belarus, Russia, Ukr border reg council meets in Kursk

The 16th meeting of the council of leaders of Belarussian, Russian and Ukrainian border regions opened in Kursk on S more »

Almaty to be large financial center

Development of Almaty as a financial center was discussed at governmental session chaired by Prime Minister of Kazakhstan Daniyal Akhmetov, PM’s press service reports more »