Osama
bin Laden fathered four children as he hid out in Pakistan after the
9/11 attacks, his youngest wife told interrogators, according to a
police report seen by AFP on Friday.
Amal Abdulfattah's account
provides rare details of the Al-Qaeda leader's life from when he fled
Afghanistan in late 2001 until his death aged 54 last May during a US
Navy SEAL operation in Abbottabad, in Pakistan.
Abdulfattah, from Yemen, was
arrested by Pakistani authorities following the US raid on bin Laden's
compound near the Pakistani capital Islamabad, along with two of his
Saudi wives, and her five children.
The three detained widows face
charges of illegally entering and residing in Pakistan. Abdulfattah, 30,
was shot while trying to protect her husband, according to the US.
The Pakistan police report, dated
January 19, said Abdulfattah was born into a family of 17 children and
married bin Laden because "she had a desire to marry a Mujahedeen",
using the term for "holy warrior".
The report, from the office of the
inspector general of police in Islamabad, recommended Abdulfattah and
her children be immediately deported.
After arriving in Pakistan in July
2000 on a three-month visa, in the company of her sister and
brother-in-law, Abdulfattah travelled to Kandahar, in neighbouring
Afghanistan, at the time capital of the Taliban regime.
The date of her marriage to bin
Laden was not specified, but the police report said afterwards she moved
in with him and his other two wives.
"She further revealed that after
the incident of 9/11, they all scattered and she came to Karachi with
one of her daughter's, Safia," the report said. Safia, her first child
by the Al-Qaeda kingpin, was born in Kandahar in 2001.
She stayed in Karachi for eight to nine months, moving between homes
arranged for them by Pakistani families and bin Laden's oldest son Saad.
Abdulfattah then met back with the
fleeing bin Laden in Peshawar, in northwest Pakistan. The report
suggests that the pair did not part from that moment until the raid in
Abbottabad.
They stayed for eight or nine
months in Swat, then for two years in Haripur, 90 minutes from
Islamabad, before moving to the garrison town of Abbottabad in 2005.
During this time, Abdulfattah had four other children by bin Laden, by then the most-wanted man in the world.
In Haripur, Aasia, a girl, was born in 2003 and Ibrahim, a boy, was born the next year.
On both occasions Abdulfattah gave birth in a public hospital, the police report said.
The other two children, Zainab, a girl, and Hussain, a boy, were born in Abbottabad in 2006 and 2008.
According to the report, the
family movements while they were on the run were organised by "Ibrahim
and Abrar", two Pakistanis given responsibility for the task by members
of Al-Qaeda.
Both the men were killed by the
Americans during the raid on Abbottabad and had been living in the same
compound, along with Ibrahim's wife, Bushra, and bin Laden's son,
Khalid.
The continued detention of bin
Laden's wives has led to accusations that Pakistan is attempting to
muzzle them to stop them from providing details that could embarrass
Islamabad or add to suspicions it knew where bin Laden was.
Pakistan was humiliated by the
covert American operation that killed the Al-Qaeda leader in the early
hours of May 2, practically on the doorstep of the country's elite
military academy.
By Emmanuel Duparcq | AFP
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