Index

DATE=2/17/2000 TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT TITLE=BIN LADEN MATCHBOXES (L) NUMBER=2-259258 BYLINE=JIM TEEPLE DATELINE=ISLAMABAD CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: The U-S government has distributed hundreds of matchboxes offering a reward for the capture of Saudi dissident Osama bin Laden - who is charged with planning the bombings of two U-S embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998. VOA's Jim Teeple reports from our Islamabad bureau the matchbox effort is part of a long-running effort to capture the alleged terrorist but as it turns out, some of the information printed on the matchboxes is not correct. Text: For months reward posters and other printed material including matchboxes have been circulated in Pakistan and Afghanistan offering a substantial reward for information leading to the capture of Osama bin Laden. Now it turns out the information on some of the printed material is wrong. Matchboxes distributed with written messages in Urdu which should have said the reward amounted to five million dollars instead said the reward was 500-thousand dollars. The average annual income in Pakistan is 492-dollars. In Afghanistan it is 150-dollars. (Figures are based on G-N-P, used by Govt. of Pakistan) U-S Embassy officials in Islamabad refused to discuss the case of the missing zero referring all questions about the misprinted matchboxes to the U-S State Department in Washington. Matchbox rewards have proved successful in the past helping to lead to the capture and extradition of Mir Amal Khansi who was convicted and sentenced to death in the United States for killing several employees of the Central Intelligence Agency outside C-I-A headquarters. The misprinted matchboxes are not the only headache for U-S officials in Pakistan. Recently hundreds of 100 rupee Pakistani notes, worth about two U-S dollars, have also appeared in the region. The notes bear stamped messages in Pashto and Dari, the two main languages of Afghanistan, promising a substantial reward for the capture of Osama bin Laden. The mysterious appearance of the notes has U-S officials baffled. The officials who concede involvement in the matchbox affair strongly deny putting reward information for Osama bin Laden's capture on Pakistani currency. (Signed) neb/jlt /plm 17-Feb-2000 06:49 AM EDT (17-Feb-2000 1149 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America .