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Osama 'will never surrender'
08/03/2006 13:16 - (SA)
Dubai - A Saudi Muslim scholar who spent years with Arab jihadis in Afghanistan says he knows Osama bin Laden well and that the al-Qaeda leader will never surrender, say reports on Wednesday.
Musa al-Qorni said: "He will never surrender because he seeks death and yearns for it."
He said that he believed bin Laden, the mastermind of the September 11 2001 attacks against the United States, was at present under the sway of the "Egyptian jihad group" led by al-Qaeda's second-in-command Ayman al-Zawahiri and acted according to its plans.
Qorni said he and others tried to convince bin Laden after he was in Sudan in the mid-1990s to come back to Saudi Arabia, but that the Saudi-born militant snubbed them and returned to Afghanistan.
Osama 'would be brought to justice'
US President George W Bush said during his first visit to Afghanistan on March 1 that he was confident bin Laden would be brought to justice.
Bin Laden, sheltered by the Taliban regime that was removed from power in a US-led invasion in late 2001, was believed to be hiding out along the remote, mountainous border between Pakistan and Afghanistan.
A US-led coalition force of about 20 000 based in southern and eastern Afghanistan as well as some 80 000 Pakistani troops stationed on the other side of the border were on the hunt for Taliban and al-Qaeda militants, including bin Laden and Taliban leader Mullah Omar.
Qorni said he went to the Pakistani city of Peshawar in the 1980s to act as mentor to the Arab jihadis (holy fighters) that flocked to the area with the support of the US, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan to fight the Soviet occupation in neighbouring Afghanistan.
Islamic law
He said that he and four other scholars taught at the Dawa and Jihad universities, established in the hijra (immigration) village for Arab fighters, near Peshawar.
His role went beyond the school benches and to the front, where he taught jihadis how to live and fight according to sharia, Islamic law, and sometimes fought alongside them.
Qorni said: "I knew many young men who before coming for jihad and in some cases they got killed, and we ask God to bless them as martyrs, led a non-Islamic and even sometimes very deviant life."
Qorni took at great length about how the Arab fighters shared with the Taliban their animosity towards Ahmad Shah Massoud, head of the rival faction that controlled a section of northern Afghanistan, who was assassinated in September 2001.
He said bin Laden took part in a Taliban staged trial that convicted Massoud of being "an apostate and agent of the West".
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