Peshawar: A tussle has erupted between Pakistan's powerful military and the government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa over a sprawling piece of land in the garrison city of Abbottabad where al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden lived and was killed in 2011.


COMMERCIAL BREAK
SCROLL TO CONTINUE READING

While local authorities want to construct a children's playground there, the military wish to build a graveyard, the BBC reported today.


The two sides have tussled over control of the land - and on Wednesday the military erected a wall around the site, surprising local authorities, the report said.


Bin Laden, 54, was killed in a US raid on his hideout on May 2, 2011. He had been living there in secret, in a three- storey building behind high walls, for several years before his death.


After his death, the land was handed over to the government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province which tore down the structure and its boundary wall, to prevent the place from becoming a site of pilgrimage for jihadists and their sympathisers.


Since then the land has been lying unutilised amid a growing neighbourhood.


Now, the local government and military authorities are in a dispute over how to use the land - and who should control its future, the report said.


The military-run Cantonment Board of Abbottabad (CBA) moved to occupy the area in May, erecting a rope-fence around it. But they removed it after the provincial authorities intervened.


This time the CBA was more decisive - building a one metre wall around the sprawling grounds, and catching the local government by surprise.


A member of the CBA council, Bashir Khan, said the military had decided to convert the land into a cemetery.


"It is needed because there is no graveyard nearby for the local population," he told the BBC.


But KP Information Minister Mushtaq Ghani dismissed the plan, saying the grounds were in the middle of a populated area and "not fit for a graveyard".


"Besides, the cantonment authorities have built the wall on land that belongs to the provincial government," Ghani said, adding that the CBA had said they build the wall "to prevent encroachments".


The provincial government hoped to turn the land into a playground for children, Ghani said.


The dispute looks set to continue - and local residents have their own ideas too, with some demanding that the land should be used to build a girls' school.


Some other military officials have mooted plans to build a revenue-generating amusement park on the land.


What everyone seems to agree on is that any project should be chosen with care so it could not be easily associated with the name of Bin Laden - something which could become a source of continuing embarrassment for the military, the report said.