The Palm Beach Post

Alleged bin Laden guard on welfare in Germany

- By Amanda Erickson Washington Post

The German government has been paying a bout $1,400 a month to a man who once allegedly guarded Osama bin Laden.

“Sami A.,” from Tunisia, is said to have worked for the al-Qaida leader in 2000 in Afghanista­n.

The 42-year-old has lived in Germany since 1997, receiving about $1,429 a month in welfare payments. (His full name has not been reported in the German media because of the country’s privacy rules.)

Sami A. traveled to Germany on a student visa more than two decades ago. In 2000, he allegedly trained at one of bin Laden’s terrorism camps.

His purported position in al-Qaida was revealed in a 2005 trial in Düsseldorf, Germany. During the trial, a witness told the judge that Sami A. had worked for bin Laden.

He has denied any links to al-Qaida, but a judge found the witness testimony cred- ible.

Sami A.’s asylum request was denied in 2006, and a court in Münster called him “an acute and considerab­le danger for public security.”

ven today, the Eve- ning Standard reports, he is thought to maintain ties with Islamist circles. He

Elives with his wife and four children in Bochum, a city in western Germany. He must report to the local police station daily.

Sami A. was not deported to Tunisia after the denial of his asylum request because of fears that he might be tortured there. As the BBC explains, “Tunisia and its Arab neighbors are not on the list of safe countries of origin to which migrants can be deported.”

At least t hree of the hijackers who flew planes into the twin towers of New York’s World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001, were members of an al-Qaida cell based in Hamburg, Germany.

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