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Lahore: Residents of Bilal town in the Pakistani garrison city of Abbottabad where Osama Bin Laden was killed last year have asked the government to build a "statue of peace" or a beautiful monument at the site of his compound to remind the world that there is no place for such a terrorist mastermind.
Ahead of the first anniversary of the death of the al Qaeda chief on May 2, security forces have been put on high alert across Pakistan to counter any possible terrorist attacks.
"We have written to the Pakistan government to build either a statue of peace or a beautiful monument at the site where Laden lived illegally. By doing so, we should give a message to the world that the man who was the symbol of terror is no more along with his philosophy. His elimination will bring peace to the world," Zubair Ahmed, a resident of Bilal Town neighbourhood where bin Laden's compound was located said.
Ahmed, a banker by profession, said he had heard that a playground would be built at the site of the compound, which was demolished in February.
"These days, boys playing cricket there," he said. Bin Laden lived at the compound in Bilal Town with his three wives and several children for about five years before he was killed in a unilateral US military raid early on May 2 last year.
The operation embarrassed the Pakistani security establishment, which was dogged by questions about whether senior officials had been aware of bin Laden's presence in a compound located a stone's throw from the elite Pakistan Military Academy.
Even an year after the US operation, certain restrictions continue to affect the lives of residents of Abbottabad district.
Ahmed said, "The first thing we are not supposed to forget while going out of the home is to carry our computerised national identity cards, which was not the case before the US operation. The second is we can no longer sell or purchase property in the whole district after the incident. Thirdly, police and army patrols in the area have increased, which is not a bad thing as far as our security is concerned. And finally a couple of check posts at some points have added a little inconvenience to guests coming from other parts of the country".
Ahmed admitted it felt a little strange to have to show his ID card to enter his own neighbourhood.
"It's seems really weird. The other interesting thing was when almost all my relatives in Lahore, Karachi, Faislabad and Multan visited me last summer with only the wish of seeing bin Laden's compound," he said.
"I took them to the compound which is not far away from my house. A police post was set up half a kilometre from the compound. Visitors can have a glimpse of the spot from that post. But my relatives were happy having a look even from a distance. They would go back home and tell their friends and neighbours that they had seen bin Laden's house where he was living with his three wives," Ahmed said with a laugh.
Nazim Waheed, a schoolteacher whose father is a retired army official, said they were not happy with the Pakistan Army and its intelligence set-up as they should have had knowledge about bin Laden's presence.
"It's the failure of our intelligence agencies. The military academy is just 10 minutes away from bin Laden's compound and it's a shame that we did not know of the presence of the world's most wanted man," he said.
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