NewsJanuary 17, 2002

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan -- U.S. investigators on Wednesday questioned a man who described himself as a financial supporter of the Taliban and showed up voluntarily at the biggest U.S. base in Afghanistan offering information. Pentagon officials said the man had given money to the Taliban but had not been a member of the Islamic regime that ruled Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001. ...

By Ellen Knickmeyer, The Associated Press

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan -- U.S. investigators on Wednesday questioned a man who described himself as a financial supporter of the Taliban and showed up voluntarily at the biggest U.S. base in Afghanistan offering information.

Pentagon officials said the man had given money to the Taliban but had not been a member of the Islamic regime that ruled Afghanistan from 1996 to 2001. It was not known what information he had about the complex web of support of Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida terrorist network, which was sheltered by the Taliban.

Marine spokesman Lt. James Jarvis said the man showed up Tuesday at the Kandahar airport, where thousands of U.S. troops are based and a detention center holds hundreds of al-Qaida and Taliban fighters.

The man remained on the base Wednesday but was not being detained, Jarvis said. A Pentagon official said on condition of anonymity that he was not on the U.S. list of wanted men, but Jarvis said investigators were "jumping with joy."

At the Pentagon, Gen. Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the man was being questioned. Officials did not disclose his identity or nationality or say how he came to the base.

U.S. officials initially said the man was an al-Qaida finance official but later Pentagon officials said he was a Taliban backer.

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Smugglers' kickbacks

The nature of the man's purported donations were unclear. However, during the years the Taliban was in power, a major source of income for the Islamic militia purportedly came from kickbacks from big-time smugglers, including drug dealers, who were willing to pay in order to be allowed to continue their operations.

Also Wednesday, a Marine color guard saluted as a flag-draped coffin holding the remains of the last of seven Marines killed in a crash a week ago was loaded onto a C-17 at Kandahar and flown to Germany en route to Dover Air Force Base. The crash of the refueling plane in Pakistan was the most deadly single incident for U.S. forces in the Afghanistan campaign.

The runway at Kandahar airport was darkened to prevent the C-17 from becoming a target for attackers.

Also Wednesday, a third planeload of Taliban and al-Qaida prisoners arrived at the U.S. Navy detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, bringing the number held there to 80. At about the same time, a fourth group of 30 more prisoners was escorted aboard another flight to Guantanamo. They were expected to arrive sometime Thursday. About 320 detainees remain at Kandahar.

Ahead of a planned visit to Afghanistan by Secretary of State Colin Powell, a U.S. congressional delegation met Afhgan Prime Minister Hamid Karzai in the capital, Kabul, and pledged that American involvement in Afghanistan would not end with the winding down of the conflict.

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