Pak panel seeks access to Osama documents

Islamabad: A commission investigating Osama bin Laden`s presence in Pakistan and the covert US raid that killed him has asked the government to give it access to 187,000 documents, including diaries and letters, found at the slain al-Qaeda leader`s compound in Abbottabad. The commission intends to analyse these documents, which are being translated from Arabic […]

Islamabad: A commission investigating Osama bin Laden`s presence in Pakistan and the covert US raid that killed him has asked the government to give it access to 187,000 documents, including diaries and letters, found at the slain al-Qaeda leader`s compound in Abbottabad. The commission intends to analyse these documents, which are being translated from Arabic by security agencies, before finalising its report.

The documents and some computer discs were found in a three-storey building in bin Laden`s compound after he was killed by US Special Forces on May 2, media reports said today. The commission believes these documents are in the custody of the ISI, the reports quoted sources as saying. The process of translating the Arabic documents has begun and might take two to three months to be completed.