April 17, 2012
OSAMA bin Laden's family is expected to be deported from Pakistan today,
their lawyer and officials have said.
Bin Laden's three widows and their children will be deported to Saudi
Arabia 11 months after the US raid that killed the al-Qaida leader.
The bin Laden family was detained by the Pakistani authorities after the
US Navy SEAL operation in the garrison town of Abbottabad, north of Islamabad, last
May.
The news came as Washington and Islamabad try to patch up their
relationship, which was badly damaged by the revelation that the world's most
wanted man was living a stone's throw from Pakistan's elite military academy.
Two weeks ago a court sentenced the widows and two of bin Laden's older
daughters to 45 days' detention on charges of illegal entry and residency in
Pakistan and ordered their deportation as soon as possible.
They were due to complete the sentence, served in an Islamabad villa
designated by authorities as a "sub-jail", yesterday, as it
officially began when they were formally arrested on the charges on March 3.
"They will go tonight or tomorrow early in the morning. After 12
tonight they can be deported any time," their lawyer Muhammad Aamir said
yesterday.
Mr Aamir said the family - who number 12, including bin Laden's three
widows, eight children and one grandchild - would probably initially go to
Saudi Arabia.
He said bin Laden's youngest and reportedly favourite wife, Amal
Abdulfattah, who is Yemeni, may be sent to Yemen afterwards with her five
children.
A Pakistani intelligence official confirmed that the family was expected
to be deported "sometime around midnight" and said "most likely
they would be flown to Saudi Arabia."
A number of Saudi diplomats have visited Pakistan in recent weeks to
work out the details of the deportation, sources say.
The discovery of bid Laden in Abbottabad dealt a massive blow to
US-Pakistan relations and led to accusations of Pakistani complicity or
incompetence.
Ms Abdulfattah, 30, told Pakistani interrogators bin Laden had fathered
four children while he hid out in Pakistan, according to a police report.
After fleeing Afghanistan in the wake of the 9/11 attacks, bin Laden
moved his family around Pakistan before settling in a three-storey house inside
a walled compound in the garrison town of Abbottabad in 2005.
According to the police 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-Qaida.
Both the men were killed 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.
In February the Pakistani authorities, reluctant for the Abbottabad
house to become a shrine to the dead terror leader, used bulldozers to raze the
building to the ground.
The continued detention of bin Laden's wives led to accusations that
Pakistan was 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, allied to Washington in the "war on terror", was
humiliated by the covert American operation that killed the al-Qaida leader in
the early hours of May 2.
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