Qatar Tribune
First Page Gulf / Middle East World
United States South Asia India
Europe Pakistan  
  
United Kingdom Philippines /SE Asia  
Home About Us Advertising Archives Subscribe Site Map Contact Us
 
 
Tuesday, February 09, 2010 Haiti´s mass graves swell; doctors fear more deathSAS tops Fortune list of best companies to work forSudan rebels say Sunday peace talks unlikelyChina economy soars, sets stage for policy tightening
Japanese school reopens in April
Preparations are going on in full swing to reopen a Japanese school in Doha in April 2009. The school is being reopened as parts of Qatar´s effort to enable Japanese students pursue education in their...
Education Reforms
FOR students to learn, they need welltrained teachers. Unfortunately, far too many teacher-preparation programmes in the United States are little more than diploma mills.As states and...
Defining a Terrorist
WHEN 10 young men in an inflatable lifeboat came ashore in Mumbai last month and went on a rampage with machine guns and grenades, taking hostages, setting fires...
Al Watan - Arabic Newspaper
Jamila - Monthly Women Magazine
Nation Business Sports Chill Out
‘Scientists offered bin Laden to supply N-weapons’

PTI - NEW DELHI Barely a month before the 9/11 terror attacks, two Pakistani nuclear scientists, said to be close to disgraced Abdul Qadeer Khan, met up with Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and offered to supply him with atomic weapons, according to a newly released book.

Chaudiri Abdul Majeed and Sultan Bashiruddin Mahmood, who held a series of senior posts in Pakistan’s nuke programme, went to Taliban headquarters in Kandahar in mid-August 2001 and spent three days with bin Laden who was keen on acquiring weapons of mass destruction, the book says.

In fact, Mahmood was said to be more close to Khan, the ‘’Father of the Islamic bomb’’ and the mastermind behind a vast clandestine enterprise which sold nuclear secrets to rogue states like Iran, North Korea and Libya. He also set up the pilot plant for Pakistan’’s uranium-enrichment programme.

However, the so-called deal did not materialise as the meeting between the Pakistani nuclear scientists and bin Laden ended inconclusively when the Al Qaeda leader, along with some of his senior associates, had abruptly left for the mountains of northwestern Afghanistan.

And, according to the book, ‘’The Man From Pakistan’’ — the true story of the world’’s most dangerous nuclear smuggler AQ Khan — before leaving, bin Laden had told his followers that “something great was going to happen, and Muslims around the world were going to join them in the holy war”. A couple of weeks later, the twin towers in New York were brought down.The 414-page book is authored by two investigative journalists — Douglas Frantz and Catherine Collins.

What’’s more revealing is that a year before they met bin Laden in Kandahar, the two Pakistani nuke scientists had set up a non-profit organisation, Ummah Tameer-e-Nau, to carry out relief work in Afghanistan.


Brown pledges to help Pak tackle terrorism
Mumbai attacks hit us badly: Zardari
Gilani raps enemies of peace process
‘War no solution to Indo-Pak problems’
Govt needs $40bn investment, says minister
Distributors cannot afford SRK’s film
Lahore zoo eager to get Indian sambars

  About Us Advertising Subscribe Careers Contact Us