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| A video grab taken January 6 from
footage broadcast by Qatari news channel al-Jazeera television shows
al-Qaeda number two Ayman al-Zawahiri giving a speech at un undisclosed
location. Zawahiri may have been killed in a US strike on a Pakistani
village which left 18 dead, US media
reported. |
WASHINGTON, Jan. 13 (Xinhuanet) -- The fate of al-Qaida
terror network's No. 2 leader Ayman al-Zawahiri is unclear after a U.S.
airstrike on a Pakistani village which left 18 dead on Friday, U.S. TV networks
reported.
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| Al-Qaida terror network's No. 2 leader
Ayman al-Zawahiri (file
photo) | Citing U.S.
military sources, NBC said the strike targeted Zawahiri, who has been indicted
in the United States for his role in 1998 attacks on U.S. embassies in Africa.
ABC quoted Pakistani military sources as saying that
five of those killed were "high level al-Qaida figures," whose bodies are
undergoing forensic tests for identification.
Zawahiri may have been one of the victims, it said.
Quoting Pakistani sources, NBC said the airstrike was probably carried out by
CIA Predator drones which fired up to 10 missiles in the village in the tribal
areas of eastern Pakistan. However, officials at CIA headquarters in Washington
declined to comment on the reports and the Pentagon denied that the U.S.
military has ever carried out any such attack in the area.
Nevertheless, the CIA is also known to conduct its
own operations along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border in the hunt foral-Qaida
leader Osama bin Laden and his deputies.
According to ABC, Zawahiri has been known to hide out
in the village over the past year.
An Egyptian native and former medical doctor,
Zawahiri has become al Qaida's most senior spokesman in videos released in
recent months as his master, bin Laden, has kept a low profile for a long time.
He appeared in a new video released last week, making
some believe that he has become the group's effective leader.
Zawahiri, along with al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden,
have long escaped capture since U.S.-led forces toppled the Taliban regime in
Afghanistan in 2001. Enditem
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