A dinner invitation to al-Qaida's second-in-command triggered a
US air strike in Pakistan but Ayman al-Zawahri failed to show up,
Pakistani intelligence officials said yesterday.
Pakistan condemned Friday's strike, which killed at least 18
people, including women and children, and summoned US Ambassador
Ryan Crocker to protest.
There were anti-American demonstrations in several towns and
cities yesterday, and supporters of Islamist and secular parties
mustered close to 10,000 people for a rally in the southern city of
Karachi.
The Foreign Ministry said on Saturday that foreigners had been
near the village of Damadola in the Bajaur region bordering
Afghanistan and were the probable target.
Pakistani intelligence officials said they were checking reports
up to seven foreign militants had been killed and their bodies
removed by local supporters. But they said there were no
indications Osama bin Laden's deputy, Zawahri, was there.
"He was invited for the dinner, but we have no evidence he was
present," a senior intelligence official said.
Al Arabiya television quoted a source it said had contact with
al-Qaida saying Zawahri was alive.
The US Government has not commented, but US sources familiar
with the operation said it was too early to determine his fate and
the remains of the dead would have to be examined.
The sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the air
strike was based on "very good" intelligence indicating Zawahri was
at the targeted location.
Another Pakistani intelligence official said two local Islamist
clerics, known for harbouring al-Qaida militants, had attended the
dinner but left hours before the air strike at 3:00 AM (22:00
GMT).
But there is widespread cynicism in Pakistan regarding what the
United States says and what it does.
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"America raised the bogey of Zawahri to provide justification for
this attack," said Meraj-ul-Huda, a local leader of Pakistan's main
Islamist alliance, Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal, attending the rally in
Karachi.
Washington has offered US$25 million each for Zawahri and bin
Laden, who have been on the run since US-led forces toppled
Afghanistan's Taliban rulers in 2001 after the September 11
attacks. The two have long been thought to be hiding along the
Afghan-Pakistan border under the protection of Pashtun tribes.
(China Daily January 16, 2006)