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Pak denies presence of Bin Laden, Mullah Omar

Afghan officials have alleged that Taliban leaders are based in Quetta and using outposts in Pak to launch attacks on international and Afghan troops.

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QUETTA: Al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden and Taliban supremo Mullah Mohammad Omar are not in southwestern Pakistan, a provincial chief minister told a top US diplomat on Thursday.

US Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs Richard Boucher travelled to Quetta, the capital of rugged Baluchistan province bordering Afghanistan, for talks with local officials.

Afghan officials and some NATO commanders have alleged that Taliban leaders are based in the city and using outposts in Pakistan to launch cross-border attacks on international and Afghan troops.

"There is no Taliban headquarters in Baluchistan nor are the Taliban chief Mullah Mohammad Omar or Osama bin Laden in Baluchistan," provincial chief minister Jan Mohammad Yusuf told Boucher.

Pakistan has repeatedly denied the presence of Bin Laden or Omar in its territory.

Boucher reportedly praised Pakistan's role in the 'war on terror' and agreed that there was no solid evidence about Mullah Omar's presence in Baluchistan.

The US official later visited the Pakistani border town of Chaman, where he was briefed about efforts to check illegal crossing of the 2,500-kilometre wide border with Afghanistan.

Boucher arrived in Pakistan on Tuesday for a visit that also includes urging embattled ally President Pervez Musharraf to hold 'free, fair and transparent' national elections. The polls are expected late this year.

Bin Laden and Mullah Omar have been on the run since US-led forces toppled Afghanistan's Taliban regime after the 9/11 attacks.

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