Bin Laden urges Pakistan holy war

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Pastor Dale Morgan

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Sep 20, 2007, 6:36:44 PM9/20/07
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*Perilous Times

Bin Laden urges Pakistan holy war*

[BBC] - Al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden has called on Pakistanis to
overthrow President Pervez Musharraf.

In a new audio tape, Bin Laden promised what he called retaliation for
the storming of the radical Red Mosque in the capital, Islamabad, in July.

He said the army operation, in which more than 100 people were killed,
made Gen Musharraf an infidel.

The new audio message was heard on the internet over previously released
footage of the militant leader.

Timing

In the tape, Bin Laden says it is now the duty of Muslims to rebel
against what he calls the "apostate leader".

President Musharraf
The Pakistani leader is not popular

The storming of the Red Mosque "demonstrated Musharraf's insistence on
continuing his loyalty, submissiveness and aid to America against the
Muslims... and makes armed rebellion against him and removing him
obligatory", Bin Laden said.

The transcript of the tape was released by Laura Mansfield, an American
terror expert who monitors militant traffic on the internet

Bin Laden was quoted as saying on another American web site,
Siteinstitute.org, that Gen Musharraf's ministers and soldiers were "all
accomplices in spilling the blood of those of the Muslims who have been
killed".

"He who helps him knowingly and willingly is an infidel like him."

It is not the first time the al-Qaeda leader has called for the
overthrow of Gen Musharraf, a key US ally in the "war on terror".

Since the attack on the World Trade Centre in 2001 he has released a
number of videos and audio messages.

But the BBC defence and security correspondent Rob Watson says Osama Bin
Laden may well consider this a timely intervention given the current
political turmoil in Pakistan and growing unpopularity of President
Musharraf.

Indeed, our correspondent says, a poll released earlier this month
suggested the Pakistani president was less popular in his own country
than the al-Qaeda leader himself.

'Fight extremists'

Even before Bin Laden's latest message, violence by pro-Taleban
militants had shot up in Pakistan following the storming of the Red Mosque.

There have been almost daily suicide bombings as well as a number of
kidnappings of Pakistani soldiers in tribal areas near the Afghan border
and in North West Frontier Province.

The threat from Bin Laden - which referred to radicals in the mosque as
"champions of Islam" - was immediately rejected by the Pakistani government.

Red Mosque in flames

Osama Bin Laden condemned the storming of the Red Mosque

"We are already committed to fighting extremists and terrorists - there
is no change in our policy," chief military spokesman Maj Gen Waheed
Arshad told the AFP news agency.

"If someone is hurling threats at us, that is their view. The whole
nation is behind us and the Pakistan army is a national institution," he
added.

The release of the tape coincided with an announcement by Pakistan's
election commission that presidential elections would be held on 6 October.

President Musharraf has said he will give up his post of army chief if
he is re-elected by parliament and provincial assemblies for another term.

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