| French paper says bin Laden died in Pakistan (Reuters)
 Updated: 2006-09-23 16:40
 PARIS - A French regional newspaper quoted a French secret service report on 
Saturday as saying that Saudi Arabia is convinced that al Qaeda leader Osama bin 
Laden died of typhoid in Pakistan last month. 
 
 
 L'Est Republicain printed what it said 
was a copy of the report dated September 21 and said it was shown to President 
Jacques Chirac, Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin and France's interior and 
defense ministers on the same day.
 |  An image taken from an 
 internet posting by al Qaeda's media arm, al Sahab on September 11, 2006, 
 shows Osama bin Laden speaking in an unknown location. 
 [Reuters]
 |  "According to a usually reliable source, the Saudi services are now convinced 
that Osama bin Laden is dead," the document said. 
 "The information gathered by the Saudis indicates that the head of al Qaeda 
was a victim while he was in Pakistan on August 23, 2006, of a very serious case 
of typhoid which led to a partial paralysis of his internal organs." 
 The report, which was stamped with a "confidential defense" label and the 
initials of the French secret service, said Saudi Arabia first heard the 
information on September 4 and that it was waiting for more details before 
making an official announcement. 
 Officials contacted by Reuters in Chirac's and Villepin's offices had no 
immediate comment. 
 A senior official in Pakistan's interior ministry said: "We have no 
information about Osama's death." 
 Saudi-born Bin Laden was based in Afghanistan until the Taliban government 
there was overthrown by U.S.-backed forces in late 2001. Since then, U.S. and 
Pakistani officials have regularly said they believe he is hiding somewhere on 
the rugged border between Afghanistan and Pakistan. 
 The last videotaped message released by bin Laden was in late 2004, but there 
have been several low quality audio tapes released this year. 
 |