Osama bin Laden lived in Pakistan for nine years at six different locations before he was killed in 2011 by Navy SEALs at his home in Abbottabad, according to a Pakistani commission report.

ADVERTISEMENT

The report, which was conducted in the aftermath of the bin Laden raid, was made public Monday by Al Jazeera.

The 336-page report holds both Pakistani politicians and the military responsible for “gross incompetence” and “collective failures” that allowed bin Laden to live undetected in Pakistan.

Al Jazeera said the Pakistani government had buried the commission’s findings and the report was only being made public after it was leaked to the news outlet.

The 2011 bin Laden raid, in which the U.S. military secretly went deep into Pakistani territory, chilled what were already tense relations between the U.S. and Pakistan. The Pakistani government set up the commission afterward in order to determine how the U.S. was able to violate Pakistani sovereignty without repercussions and how the al Qaeda leader was able to avoid detection.

The commission found that bin Laden lived in six different locations in Pakistan over the course of nine years, after interviewing his wives, the wives of his couriers, and intelligence officials, according to Al Jazeera.

The report said that bin Laden initially traveled to Pakistan’s tribal areas after fleeing the battle of Tora Bora. The wife of a bin Laden courier said that in 2002 she traveled with a “clean-shaven Arab” to Swat Valley.

The wife told the commission that their car was once stopped for speeding with bin Laden inside, but the matter was settled quickly.

After Khalid Sheikh Mohammed was arrested in 2003, shortly after visiting bin Laden, bin Laden left Swat. Three months later, the woman said that she saw bin Laden again in Hairpur, which is about 20 miles south of Abbottabad.

From there, bin Laden eventually went to his newly built house in Abbottabad in 2005, according to the report.