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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › AbbottabadAbbottabad - Wikipedia

    Abbottabad was founded in the early 1850s, by a British military officer in the Bengal Army of the British Raj, James Abbott, and replaced Haripur as Hazara's capital. On 9 November 1901, the British established a North-West Frontier Province from the north-western districts of The Punjab. This meant that Abbottabad was now a part of the newly ...

  2. Sep 17, 2024 · Abbottabad is a district market centre. It was founded in 1853 and named after Maj. James Abbott, the first British deputy commissioner of the region. There are parks, a preparatory school , several colleges affiliated with the University of Peshawar , and a forest research centre.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Under the British Raj, Abbottabad was the headquarters of the Hazara District. Abbottabad got its name from the founder of the town, Major James Abbott. He founded the town in January 1853 after the invasion of Punjab. From 1849 to April 1853, Major Abbott was the first Deputy Commissioner of the Hazara district.

  4. The history of Abbottabad is rich and diverse, with roots dating back to the British colonial era. Established in 1853 by Major James Abbott, the city was initially a military garrison and later evolved into a bustling urban center. The British influence is evident in the architecture of some colonial-era buildings that still stand proudly in ...

    • Bin Laden Chose to Hide in Plain Sight
    • He Had The Compound Custom-Built
    • It's Unclear How Many People Lived There
    • They Lived in Extreme Isolation and Self-Sufficiency
    • Their Lives Were Austere, with Western Touches
    • Bin Laden Kept Confined to A Small Space
    • They Used Tricks to Evade Local Authorities
    • Bin Laden's Couriers Wanted Out

    After 9/11, the bin Laden family spent several years on the run, moving from one sympathetic Pakistani locale to another—including the frontier city of Peshawar and the rural Swat Valley, among others. When his supporters decided it was time for the family to settle, they chose Abbottabad, which bin Laden had visited and liked. In 2004, his trusted...

    “Arshad” hired a local architectural firm to draw up plans for a large, two-story building on the premises—with very specific criteria. On the ground floor, the new villa was designed with four bedrooms and three bathrooms, as well as a kitchen; the second floor had another four bedrooms and four bathrooms. A third floor was added later, write Levy...

    The compound came to be known to locals as the Waziristan Haveli, or Waziristan House/Mansion, due to the Waziri accents of “Arshad” and his brother, Ibrahim. Both men—al Qaeda stalwarts who would serve as bin Laden’s primary couriers, caretakers, aides and buffers to the outside world, moved in first, together with their families. By the end of 20...

    Life in the Abbottabad hideout was designed to be as self-contained and self-sufficient as possible, to minimize contact with the outside world. The compound lacked telephone or Internet service—too easy to track—but did have satellite dishes allowing residents to watch the old TVs later found there. The residents burned their garbage rather than p...

    The compound’s inhabitants lived frugally, going without air conditioning in the hot summers and sleeping on foam mattresses. Bin Laden’s wardrobe included three Pakistani-style outfits for summer and another three for winter, and a single sweater. But when the al-Kuwaiti brothers headed to the local bazaars, they would stock up not just on naan br...

    Two of the rooms on the upper floors became bin Laden’s media center. On the back of a door, he hung the thobe (an Arab man’s robe) he donned when filming videos to be distributed to followers. A snub-nosed Kalashnikov, a memento from his days fighting Russian invaders in Afghanistan, rested on a shelf above the door. Yellow flowered curtains scree...

    The al-Kuwaiti brothers disguised how many people lived in the compound by ensuring that no fewer than four separate electric meters were installed. Still, a Pakistani board of inquiry, whose report was later obtained by Al Jazeera, concluded that bin Laden “was extremely fortunate to not run into anyone committed to doing his job honestly, or ther...

    Even as the Americans prepared to launch their attack on the compound, relationships were breaking down inside its walls. Exhausted by meeting the needs of a fluctuating but steadily expanding number of confined bin Laden family members and those of their own growing families, the al-Kuwaiti brothers gave the al Qaeda chief an ultimatum. They would...

  5. The city of Abbottabad is named after Major James Abbott – a British soldier and administrator who founded the city during British rule in 1853. [4] British rule in this area lasted from 1849 [5] until Pakistan became independent in 1947. During this time, Abbottabad was an important army garrison or base for the British Indian Army.

  6. Abbottabad is named after its founder and first Deputy Commissioner of the Hazara region, James Abbott, a British officer. Abbott founded the town in January 1853 [1]. However, soon after founding this town, Abbott was posted away in April 1853 and his successor Deputy Commissioner Herbert Edwardes took on the task of developing it, along the ...

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