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Tarar's death was first reported Sunday, but officials could not confirm it. He was believed held in North Waziristan, a region bordering Afghanistan that is under effective militant control. Hayat, the government official, said authorities were "sure that he is dead" but that militants still had Tarar's body. He said the captors, whom he did not identify, were demanding $200,000 for its return. Tarar had very close ties with the U.S. during the Soviet occupation. He trained at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, and gave personal tours of the border region to several Congressmen, including Charlie Wilson, who drove American financial support to Afghan militiamen then regarded by Washington as freedom fighters, said Roy Gutman in his book "How We Missed the Story: Osama bin Laden, the Taliban and the Hijacking of Afghanistan." According to Gutman, the Reagan administration presented Imam with a plaque mounted with a piece of the Berlin Wall that read: "Dedicated to Colonel Imam. With deepest respect to one who helped deliver the first blow." Tarar developed a close rapport with Taliban leader Mullah Omar in the mid-1990s as he rose to power in Afghanistan, said Zahid Hussain in his book "Frontline Pakistan: The Struggle With Militant Islam." He was posted as Pakistan's consul general in several Afghan cities, including Kandahar, and helped funnel arms and money to the Taliban, said Hussain.
[Associated
Press;
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