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"Bin Laden is dead," Panetta wrote in a memo to CIA staff. "Al-Qaida is not." In Pakistan's southern city of Karachi on Wednesday, about 1,000 mourners joined prayers for bin Laden arranged by a militant-linked charity. But there have been few other protests in the country that bin Laden may have used as his fugitive base for years. In bin Laden's pre-9/11 stronghold, Afghanistan, many people still refused to believe that he was dead despite Washington's assertions of positive DNA tests. On Wednesday, President Obama said the U.S. will not release the photo of bin Laden's body that was taken after he was killed. "I don't think he's dead," said Salam Jan Rishtania, a 26-year-old student in Kandahar. "I don't trust the Americans because they are playing games over here. This may be part of their game." Still, there were some acts of homage in other parts of the Muslim world. About 25 people in the Gaza Strip held pictures and posters of bin Laden on Tuesday. On the podcast channel of the pan-Arab broadcaster Al-Jazeera, some messages praised bin Laden among many others denouncing him. "You are the sheik of the mujahedeen (holy warriors). God may grant you heaven," said one post. Another read: "You are in heaven, Sheik Osama." Ismail Haniyeh, the prime minister of Hamas-controlled Gaza, portrayed bin Laden as the victim of a state-sponsored "terrorist act." "We disagree with the vision of holy warrior Osama bin Laden, but we condemn this terrorist act," Haniyeh told The Associated Press on Wednesday. "What the U.S. did is not a heroic action, but a targeted killing. ... To pursue and kill him in Pakistan, which is Muslim land, means for us a further intervention in the land of Islam." But in Somalia, where a hard-line Islamist group holds sway over large parts of the country, demonstrators marched defiantly through government-held parts of the capital, Mogadishu, and burned a flag they said represented al-Qaida. "Terror, terror go away," they chanted. "Little kids want to play."
[Associated
Press;
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