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AP
Photo
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| Smoke billows from one of the towers of the World Trade Center as flames and debris explode from the second tower. |
By KATHY GANNON
Associated Press Writer |
KABUL, Afghanistan
- Afghanistan's hardline Taliban rulers condemned the devastating terrorist
attacks in New York and Washington on Tuesday and rejected suggestions that
Osama bin Laden could be behind them.
"We never support
terrorism. We too are targets of terrorism," Abdul Hai Muttmain, the Taliban's
spokesman in the southern city of Kandahar, told The Associated Press in a
telephone interview.
After the attacks,
a London-based Arab journalist said followers of bin Laden warned three weeks
ago that they would carry out a "huge and unprecedented attack" on U.S.
interests.
Abdel-Bari Atwan,
editor of the Al-Quds al-Arabi newspaper, said he received a warning from
Islamic fundamentalists close to bin Laden, but did not take the threat
seriously.
"They said it would
be a huge and unprecedented attack but they did not specify," Atwan said in a
telephone interview in London.
"We usually receive
this kind of thing. At the time we did not take the warnings seriously as they
had happened several times in the past and nothing happened. "This time it seems
his people were accurate and meant every word they said."
Atwan, who
interviewed bin Laden in 1996 and has since maintained contacts with his
followers, said he believed the attack on the World Trade Center in New York was
the work of "an Islamic fundamentalist group" close to bin Laden.
But Muttmain, who
is the spokesman for the Taliban's reclusive leader Mullah Mohammed Omar and one
of the most senior Taliban officials, dismissed allegations that bin Laden could
be behind the attacks in the United States.
"Such a big
conspiracy, to have infiltrated in such a major way is impossible for Osama,"
said Muttmain. He said bin Laden does not have the facilities to orchestrate
such a major assault within the United States.
Afghanistan's
Taliban rulers, who espouse a harsh brand of Islamic law, have resisted U.S.
demands to hand over bin Laden, indicted in the United States on charges of
masterminding the bombings of two U.S. Embassies in East Africa in 1998 that
killed 224 people, including 12 Americans.
After the attacks
in East Africa, Washington retaliated with a blistering missile attack in August
1998, sending more than 70 Tomahawk cruise missiles into eastern Afghanistan
apparently targeting training camps operated by bin Laden.
The attacks killed
about 20 followers of bin Laden's but the exiled Saudi millionaire escaped
unhurt. Since then he has been forced by the Taliban rulers to stop giving
interviews and making statements.
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