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American ‘hunting’ for Osama held in Pakistan

June 15, 2010 06:29 pm | Updated November 28, 2021 09:08 pm IST - Islamabad

Pakistani authorities have detained a U.S. national trying to cross into Afghanistan to hunt the elusive al-Qaeda leader, Osama bin Laden, police said on Tuesday.

Gary Brooks Faulkner, 52, who comes from California, told officials that he was heading for the Afghan province of Nooristan on a mission to decapitate Osama bin Laden and his four accomplices.

Police recovered a 1-metre sword, a dagger, a pistol and night-vision goggles from Faulkner, who has no connection to any U.S. law enforcement agencies, said Mumtaz Ahmad, the district’s top police investigator. Faulkner, a kidney patient, arrived in Chitral district, 270 kilometres north of Islamabad, on June 3 and went missing from his hotel room on Sunday night. He was later found by police in the district’s Kalash valley, Ahmad said.

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“He told us that the terrorists had harmed Americans and he himself wanted to search for and kill Osama,” Ahmad said. “He is just a tourist who is not associated with any U.S. agency. Possibly he only wants revenge for the 9/11 attacks.”

The detainee was being moved to Peshawar, the capital of the north-western province of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, for further questioning in connection with the attempted illegal border crossing.

The self-styled “Rambo” who has not been formally charged, has visited Pakistan seven times and Chitral three times.

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