RAWALPINDI, Pakistan — Osama bin Laden’s family were deported from Pakistan to Saudi Arabia early Friday, officials said, nearly a year after the al-Qaida leader was killed in a U.S. raid.
The 9/11 mastermind’s three widows and their children were detained by Pakistan after he was killed on May 2 last year in a secret U.S. Navy SEAL operation in the garrison town of Abbottabad, north of Islamabad.
Washington and Islamabad are currently working to repair 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.
Pakistani authorities have already demolished the Abbottabad house and with the one-year anniversary of bin Laden’s death just a few days away, they will be keen for the deportation to mark a definitive end to what has been an extremely embarrassing episode.
After 10 months in detention, the widows and two of bin Laden’s older daughters were sentenced by a Pakistani court to 45 days’ detention on charges of illegal entry and residency in the country and ordered to be deportation.
Around midnight on Thursday, a minibus collected the 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 spokesman said orders were passed for the deportation of 14 bin Laden relatives.
They were taken to Islamabad airport to board a special flight to the Gulf kingdom which took off shortly before 2 a.m. Friday.
An interior ministry spokesman told AFP: “The plane has left for Saudi Arabia.”
The family were 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.
The family’s lawyer Atif Ali Khan last week said bin Laden’s Yemeni widow Amal Abdulfattah and her five children could be sent to Yemen after Saudi Arabia.
Bin Laden’s discovery in Abbottabad dealt a huge blow to U.S.-Pakistan relations and led to accusations of Pakistani complicity or incompetence.
After fleeing Afghanistan in the wake of the 9/11 attacks, bin Laden moved his family around Pakistan before settling in a three-story house inside a walled compound in the garrison town in 2005.
The family’s prolonged detention after the raid fed speculation that the Pakistani authorities were worried about what they might reveal about bin Laden’s time in the country—and how he was able to live there for so long undetected.
Abdulfattah, 30, bin Laden’s youngest and reportedly favorite wife, told Pakistani interrogators that her husband fathered four children while he hid out in Pakistan, according to a police report seen by AFP last month.
source: japantoday.com