Montreal Gazette

Bin Laden’s family deported to Saudi Arabia

Three widows, children ordered out of Pakistan

- MASROOR GILANI AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

RAWALPINDI, PAKISTAN – Osama bin Laden’s family was deported from Pakistan to Saudi Arabia early Friday, officials said, nearly a year after the al-qaida leader was killed in a raid.

The 9/11 mastermind’s three widows and their children were detained by Pakistani authoritie­s after the Saudi was killed in a U.S. Navy SEAL operation in the garrison town of Abbottabad, north of Islamabad, last May.

Washington and Islamabad’s relationsh­ip 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.

The family’s departure will remove a physical reminder of that rupture and of the humiliatio­n Pakistan felt at the raid, which the United States kept secret from its ally.

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.

About midnight on Friday a minibus collected the terror kingpin’s family from the Islamabad house where they had served the sentence, which was completed 10 days ago.

The family were believed to number 12 – three widows, eight children and one grandchild – though an interior ministry spokespers­on said orders were passed for the deportatio­n of 14 bin Laden relatives.

They were taken to Islamabad airport where they entered via a back entrance, sources said, before boarding a special flight to the Gulf kingdom which took off shortly before 2 a.m. local time.

The family was originally supposed to be deported after completing their sentence last week but the move dragged on – officially because legal formalitie­s were not complete but amid suggestion­s the Saudis were reluctant to accept such a notorious group.

Then, on Thursday, a Pakistani security official said, “some developmen­t happened late in the evening” allowing them to be expelled.

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. Bin Laden’s youngest wife, Amal Abdulfatta­h, 30, told Pakistani interrogat­ors that bin Laden had fathered four children while he hid out in Pakistan, states a police report seen by AFP last month.

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.

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