By KATHY GANNON
Associated Press Writer |
KABUL, Afghanistan – Taliban forces abandoned their last stronghold Friday
without a fight, freeing Kandahar from the Islamic militia's harsh grip. U.S.
forces attacked armed fighters leaving the city, and Afghanistan's new leader
vowed to arrest the fugitive mullah, Mohammed Omar.
In the east, American warplanes pounded the towering mountains around Tora
Bora, where tribal commanders — spotting a tall man on horseback and
intercepting radio traffic inquiring about "the sheik" — were increasingly
certain Osama bin Laden was hiding.
Backing away from their vow to defend Kandahar to the death, the Taliban had
agreed Thursday to hand their weapons over to a tribal leader and surrender the
city, the Taliban's birthplace and last stand. But when tribal forces moved in
Friday to implement the agreement, most of the Taliban were gone and Omar's
whereabouts were unknown, according to the new Afghan interim prime minister,
Hamid Karzai.
President Bush, at a ceremony marking the 60th anniversary of the Japanese
attack on Pearl Harbor, rejected ``a truce or a treaty'' with any Taliban or
terrorist enemy in Afghanistan. ``Like all fascists, the terrorists cannot be
appeased. They must be defeated,'' he said.
His chief of staff, Andy Card told reporters on Air Force One that U.S.
officials didn't think Omar had left Kandahar. ``We're pretty sure he's in
Kandahar,'' he said. A report from one Pakistan news service with a
correspondent in Kandahar said that both Omar and his spokesman were still in
the city where rival factions were quarreling over control.
Karzai vowed to arrest Omar if the Afghans can find him, after the United
States made clear it would accept no deal allowing him to remain free.
``The Taliban ran away with their weapons,'' Karzai said. ``The leaders and
the soldiers, they have all run away from the city.''
Gen. Tommy Franks, chief of the U.S. Central Command, said U.S. forces were
attacking Taliban troops fleeing from the city, using ground and air forces. He
didn't give details. ``We have engaged forces who are leaving Kandahar with
their weapons,'' he said in Tampa, Florida.
Some residents, however, reported some departing Taliban turned in their
weapons. Looting and gunfire were reported in some parts, but by nightfall a
commander overseeing the handover said peace had returned. ``The process of
surrender has been completed and now the city is calm and peaceful,'' Haji
Bashar said.
U.S. warplanes bombed areas around the city — presumably pockets of
resistance or Taliban and al-Qaida fighters trying to escape.
``As we see emerging targets and we see good opportunities, we're going after
them,'' said Pentagon spokeswoman Victoria Clarke.
U.S. Marines patrolling a road near Kandahar attacked a three-car Taliban
convoy early Friday, killing seven people in their first ground combat since
setting up base in the desert near Kandahar on Nov. 25.
The murky surrender of Kandahar made no mention of bin Laden or the hundreds
of Arabs, Pakistanis, Chechens and other foreign fighters who follow him. On
Friday, Afghanistan's new administration promised to capture foreign al-Qaida
fighters and Taliban leaders and bring them to trial.
``For the people who have on their hands the blood of the Afghan people,
there is no general amnesty,'' Younus Qanooni, the new interior minister, said
on a visit to India.
Western reporters were kept from Kandahar by the Taliban and so first hand
reports were impossible. However, residents contacted by telephone said
overjoyed citizens poured into the streets carrying pictures of Afghanistan's
deposed king. Others tore down the Taliban's white flag in favor of
Afghanistan's old royal red, black and green ensign.
``The Taliban rule is finished. As of today they are no longer a part of
Afghanistan,'' Karzai said in a satellite telephone interview with The
Associated Press.
But pockets of Taliban remained — among them, according to Franks, a group
south of the city of Kunduz, though they are not fighting and are in talks with
the northern alliance.
With Taliban power finished, the United States is focusing on its remaining
objective — apprehending bin Laden, suspected of orchestrating the Sept. 11
attacks in the United States.
In the east, the majestic White Mountains filled with smoke and dust as
American jets bombed positions of Arab fighters loyal to bin Laden around his
Tora Bora cave complex.
Tribal commanders, mindful of a $25 million reward for bin Laden, reported
two intriguing bits of information Friday: One group of fighters spotted a man
resembling bin Laden on horseback visiting front-line troops, and another told
of intercepted radio traffic in Arabic, inquiring from Kandahar about ``the
sheik.''
``The reply is, `The sheik is fine,''' said commander Zein Huddin. He was
convinced ``the sheik'' was none other than bin Laden. Neither report could be
independently confirmed.
The Taliban began surrendering Kandahar after two months of U.S. airstrikes
and advances by opposition forces that drove them from most of the country. The
United States launched its military campaign against them after they refused to
hand over bin Laden.
Under the surrender agreement, control of the city was transferred to a
tribal council. But one faction under former Kandahar governor Gul Agha has
refused to recognize the authority of another under Mullah Naqib Ullah.
Khalid Pashtun, an ally of Agha, told Britain's Channel 4 News that Mullah
Naqib Ullah was holding Omar ``in a friendly environment.''
He also claimed about 250 Arabs were holding out in the southern part of the
city. Efforts to contact Mullah Naqib Ullah's faction were unsuccessful.
The South Asian Dispatch Agency, based in Pakistan, quoted Omar's spokesman
Syed Tayyab Agha as saying both he and the Taliban chief remained in Kandahar.
``I am here and will remain here until otherwise ordered,'' Agha was quoted
as saying. ``As long as Mullah Omar is here, I will be here. Many of our people
are still in this city.''
Karzai said he believed Omar and what's left of the Taliban and al-Qaida
headed for mountain hide-outs in Zabul province, northeast of Kandahar. An old
friend of Karzai's, fellow Taliban founder Mullah Mohammed Khaqzar, said the
Taliban leader fled the city before the surrender.
Karzai, after ambiguous statements on Thursday, vowed Friday to bring Omar to
justice.
``Of course I want to arrest him,'' he said. ``I have given him every chance
to denounce terrorism and now the time has run out. He is an absconder, a
fugitive from justice.''
Karzai confirmed that chaos had broken out in several areas within Kandahar
as a result of the Taliban's flight. He said there was no fighting among rival
anti-Taliban forces.
However, frightened residents reported skirmishes among armed gangs. Speaking
by satellite telephone from the city, one resident said armed men had set up
checkpoints on some main roads.
And in the area's first report of retribution, Agha's forces said they hanged
a man they suspected of participating in the assassination of Abdul Haq, a
Pashtun leader killed by the Taliban on Oct. 26 while trying to stir up
opposition to the Islamic militia.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Associated Press correspondents Christopher Torchia in Quetta,
Pakistan, and Chris Tomlinson in Tora Bora, Afghanistan, contributed to this
report.
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