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Afghanistan
Masood's assassination - details
2001-09-25
  • Afgha.com
    Like the attacks in America, the planning for Masood's assassination appears to have begun some time ago - perhaps with the theft of two Belgian passports in Strasbourg and the Hague in 1999. These were presented at the Pakistani high commission in London in July by Karim Touzani, 34, and Kacem Bakkali, 26, to obtain journalist visas to visit that country.

    The men arrived in Islamabad on July 25 and went to the Taliban embassy, where they presented a letter of introduction from the "Islamic Observation Centre". The group in Maida Vale, west London, described itself as a "worldwide organisation concerned with human rights issues for Muslims all over the world" and said the men were journalists for "Arabic News International". The letter was signed by Yasser al-Suri, an Egyptian dissident living in London, and requested help for its bearers, ending with the flourish: "May Allah reward you!"

    Equipped with the necessary papers to work in the Taliban-controlled part of Afghanistan, the assassins travelled to Kabul, where it is believed they collected explosives, then received permission to pass into the stronghold of Masood in the Panjshir valley.

    Causse met them when she and other journalists were about to board a helicopter to visit a refugee camp. It seemed odd to bump into Arabs in Afghanistan. "The only Arabs you tend to hear about are the ones training in the terror camps of Bin Laden," she said. "I wondered if they were who they said they were. But there was nothing fanatical about them. They had notebooks. They seemed interested in everything they saw."

    The group was taken to Kwajja Baha-Uddin, a dusty town Masood had made his headquarters. Installed in a guesthouse, the journalists awaited his arrival. The Arabs seemed particularly interested in securing the interview. "They said their journey would be in vain if they didn't get to speak to Masood," recalled Causse.

    When Eddie Girardet, a Swiss American reporter, joined the group, he too was curious about the Arabs. But, he said, "they were pretty quiet, there was no hint of fundamentalism. They were in jeans and seemed westernised".

    Causse, Girardet and a Russian journalist soon tired of waiting for Masood, who never slept more than one night in the same place and whose movements were as unpredictable as his military planning. Heavy dust meant his helicopter would not be able to fly in. Believing this could mean a delay of several days, the westerners went home. The Arabs waited.

    A Paris-based photographer who liked to play chess with Masood warned him last year that he should be more cautious. "He was always very welcoming to the press. There were never any security checks. When I raised this with him, he just laughed and said, 'When my time comes to die it will come and nobody can do anything about it.' "

    That moment came on the morning of September 9 - two days before the murderous rampage in America. The assassins were ushered into a modest house, where the commander was apparently talking on his satellite phone. Also present were Asim Soheil, Masood's press attach, Fahim Dashty, a local journalist and friend of Masood, and Masood Khalili, the anti-Taliban Afghan ambassador to India.

    The younger of the Arabs placed his camera on a table in front of Masood. According to one report, he then lay down by the table, at which point an explosion ripped through the room. One of the Arabs was killed, as was Soheil. Masood lay bleeding, his head pierced by shrapnel, and never emerged from a coma. He died four hours after the attack, survived by his wife and six children.

    In an apparent attempt to prevent panic among the ranks, his followers covered up news of the death, announcing it six days later, along with the appointment of General Muhammad Fahim as Masood's successor. American intelligence officials are already believed to have made contact with him: yet the loss of Masood does not bode well.

    The divided heirs to Masood, whose charisma and military triumphs commanded total devotion from his men, may be reluctant to become the tool for a campaign against Bin Laden. "They are a fiercely independent bunch," said one expert. "Masood alone seemed to know how to control them."
  • Posted by:Fred Pruitt

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