God this is a lame country.  How many times is "US" plastered

on the trinkets?  Are they so disconnected from the locals that

they think a pile of satan's money will make them Judas their

Saint George?







U.S. launches new campaign to get bin Laden



 Thursday, 17 February 2000 3:26 (ET)



 U.S. launches new campaign to get bin Laden

 By ANWAR IQBAL



  ISLAMABAD, Feb. 17 (UPI) -- The United States has launched a fresh "get

 Osama bin Laden" campaign in Pakistan and neighboring Afghanistan, putting

 messages on thousands of match boxes to encourage people to help arrest the

 suspected terrorist.



  The match boxes, bearing an official message from the U.S. government to

 help catch bin Laden, appeared in Pakistan and Afghanistan this week.

 Printed in Urdu, Pashto and Dari languages, each box has a color picture of

 the Saudi dissident and a reminder that the U.S. government is offering

 $500,000 for his arrest.



  Similar messages have been stamped on Pakistani currency. The message

 assures that information leading to bin Laden's arrest would be kept secret

 and those providing information would be rewarded.



  However, the message stamped on the currency puts the reward as $5

 million.



  Officials at the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad admit to printing the match

 boxes but say they had nothing to do with the message stamped on the

 currency. They say that the reward for bin Laden's arrest is $5 million, and

 not $500,000 mistakenly placed on the match boxes.



  Both messages urge people with information about bin Laden to contact the

 U.S. Embassy in Islamabad or the nearest U.S. Consulate.



  The message in Urdu also says that if the people with information desire,

 the U.S. government will resettle them anywhere in the world.



  Another message in the match boxes says bin Laden has been indicted in the

 Aug. 7, 1998, killing of 220 people in Kenya and Tanzania, referring to the

 near simultaneous explosions near U.S. embassies in those countries. It says

 the U.S. government welcomes bin Laden's arrest in any country. The U.S.

 government, the message says, also desires information that could "establish

 the allegations" against him.



  Bin Laden has been in Afghanistan since 1993 when he arrived from Sudan.

 Although the Taliban militia replaced the Mujahideen government in Kabul

 that had provided sanctuary to the Saudi dissident, Afghanistan's new rulers

 also continue to protect him.



  The Taliban government has rejected a U.S. demand to expel bin Laden and

 instead offered to try him in Afghanistan if the United States sends

 evidence against him to Taliban authorities. Washington has rejected the

 offer.

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