'Osama dead' rumour started at a party

PAKISTAN: An informal chat between two diplomats at a social gathering in Pakistan appears to have been the trigger for a worldwide…

PAKISTAN: An informal chat between two diplomats at a social gathering in Pakistan appears to have been the trigger for a worldwide flurry of speculation over the weekend about the possible death of Osama bin Laden.

The regional French newspaper l'Est Republicain quoted a leaked document from France's intelligence service on Saturday saying that Saudi secret services were convinced the al-Qaeda leader had died. The document, dated Thursday, had been sent to the French president Jacques Chirac and other top French officials, it said.

But according to Alexis Debat, a former French intelligence official, the report was based solely on a conversation between a French diplomat and a low-level Saudi diplomat at a social function in Islamabad. The French diplomat had felt obliged to pass on the details to headquarters in Paris. "There is no hard information the report is true," Mr Debat said. The report suggested that bin Laden had died of typhoid in Pakistan late last month.

Time magazine posted an article on its website citing an unidentified Saudi source who claimed that bin Laden was stricken with a water-borne disease and may be dead. However, Mr Chirac said bin Laden's death "has not been confirmed in any way whatsoever and so I have no comment to make" and that he was surprised a confidential note had been published. The Saudi embassy in Washington also issued a statement saying there was no evidence to support the reports.