Arab Times

Abbottabad docus shed new light on Laden kin’s persona

‘MoH has right to impose fees on health services’

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KUWAIT CITY, Jan 22, (Agencies): A new photo of Osama bin Laden’s son-in-law and the alQaeda spokesman in Iran has been released. The photo is part of the Abbottabad documents.

The image of the 52-year-old Kuwait-born Sulaiman Abu Ghaith which was taken north of Tehran shows him in a completely different form unlike his appearance­s in the al-Qaeda media publicatio­ns.

The image taken in 2009 showed Abu Ghaith outing with his family which was organized by the Iranian officials when the al-Qaeda was gaining a foothold in Iran.

The picture was allegedly taken during ‘a family trip to the tourist areas north of Tehran organized by the prison administra­tion’.

Apart from Abu Ghaith, the trip is likely to have included his wife Fatima bin Laden and their children, along with her brothers Hamza, Othman, Mohammad and Saad, who were all living in the same house.

Abu Ghaith who also appeared in photograph­s during Hamza bin Laden’s marriage in Iran in 2005 was born in Kuwait in 1956 and worked as a teacher of jurisprude­nce and Sharia in Kuwait before joining alQaeda.

Abu Ghaith was close to Khalid Sheikh Mohammad, the coordinato­r of the September 11 attacks, and who is currently being tried in the United States.

In 1994, Abu Ghaith left for Bosnia-Herzegovin­a to fight and two months later returned to Kuwait.

His travels to Bosnia and Afghanista­n continued, prompting the Kuwaiti Awqaf Ministry to dismiss him.

He then settled with his wife and six children in Afghanista­n.

Following the 9/11 attacks in New York, Abu Ghaith appeared in a video as al-Qaeda spokesman, threatenin­g similar attacks and prompting the Kuwaiti government to withdraw his nationalit­y.

The US incursion into Afghanista­n and the defeat of the Taleban regime and al-Qaeda there forced Abu Ghaith to escape with his family in 2001.

The bin Laden family and several al-Qaeda leaders then relocated to Iran and Tehran hosted them for more than 10 years.

In 2013, the Turkish security services arrested Abu Ghaith after they received a tip-off from the CIA that his son would stay in a hotel in Ankara.

The Turkish security forces released him after 33 days of detention because he did not have any criminal or terrorist-related record in Turkey.

He was found to have entered Turkey with an Iranian passport. Abu Ghaith was deported by the Turkish authoritie­s to Jordan but was arrested directly by the CIA.

In 2014, a US district court in New York sentenced Abu Ghaith to life imprisonme­nt convicting him of terrorism-related charges.

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