Gulf News reported that it had previously been used as a
safe house by
Inter-Services Intelligence, but was no longer being used for this purpose. ISI alleged that this compound was raided in 2003 while under construction as
Abu Faraj al-Libbi was suspected of living there. However, satellite photos show that in 2004 the site was an empty field. The compound was believed to be built around the summer of 2005 to late 2006, based on local accounts, most likely completed in late 2005 as intelligence reports indicate Bin Laden may have moved into the house on 6 January 2006. American intelligence officials discovered bin Laden's whereabouts by tracking one of his couriers,
Abu Ahmed al-Kuwaiti. Information was collected from
Guantánamo Bay detainees who gave intelligence officers al-Kuwaiti's pseudonym and said that he was a protégé of
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. In 2007, US officials discovered the courier's real name, and, in 2009, that he lived in Abbottābad. Using satellite photos and intelligence reports, the CIA surveilled the inhabitants of the compound. In September, the CIA concluded that the compound was "custom built to hide someone of significance" and that it was very likely that bin Laden was residing there. Bin Laden's wife confirmed to the Pakistani authorities that they had lived in the compound for five years. Prior to moving to the compound, they lived in the village of
Chak Shah Muhammad, in the nearby
Haripur District, for nearly two and a half years.
Operation Neptune Spear Osama bin Laden was killed in Waziristan Haveli on 2 May 2011, shortly after 01:00
local time, by the United States Naval Special Warfare Development Group. Encounters between the SEALs and the residents took place in the guest house, in the main building on the first floor where two adult males lived, and on the second and third floors where bin Laden lived with his family. The operation, code-named
Operation Neptune Spear, was ordered by United States president
Barack Obama and carried out in a US
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) operation by a team of
United States Navy SEALs from the
United States Naval Special Warfare Development Group (informally known as DEVGRU or by its former name SEAL Team Six) of the
Joint Special Operations Command in conjunction with CIA officers. The raid on the compound was launched from Afghanistan. After the raid, US forces took bin Laden's body to Afghanistan for identification, then buried it at sea within 24 hours of his death.
After the event Following the raid, the former hideout was placed under the security control of the Pakistan Police. Days after the raid, police allowed reporters and locals to approach the walls of the compound, but kept the doors sealed shut. The construction included highly fortified walls made of concrete blocks with three gates, separating the building from the large courtyard and a garden planted with immature fruit trees in front of a collapsed wall. Pakistan security agencies demolished the compound in February 2012 to prevent
Mujahedeen from memorializing it. In February 2013, Pakistan announced plans to build a R265 million ($2.7M)
amusement park in the area, including the property of the former hideout.
Local residents Locals disclosed details about their interactions with the residents of the compound to an
AP journalist in Pakistan. A woman who distributed
polio vaccines to the compound said she saw expensive
SUVs parked inside. The men received the vaccine and instructed her to leave. A woman in her 70s said one of the men from the hideaway gave her a ride to the market in rainy weather. Her grandchildren played with the children living in the house, and received rabbits as presents. One farmer said, "People were skeptical in this neighborhood about this place and these guys. They used to gossip, say they were
smugglers or
drug dealers. People would complain that even with such a big house they didn't invite the poor or distribute charity." Present at some neighborhood funerals, two men from the compound were "tall, fair skinned and bearded" and self-identified as cousins from elsewhere in the region. Neighbors said that if a child's ball went over the fence, the men in the compound did not return that ball; instead they paid the child 100–150
rupees (about US$1.10–$1.80), many times its value. ==See also==