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Pakistan still holding bin Laden's wives, children
Investigators gain insight into bin Laden's life on the run from testimony of his family before returning them to their countries of origin
Published in Ahram Online on 08 - 05 - 2011

As U.S. investigators comb through a treasure trove of computer data and documents seized from Osama bin Laden's home, Pakistani officials face a more domestic task: What to do with three of the slain terrorist leader's wives and eight of his children.
Pakistan's foreign ministry said Sunday that government officials were still holding the wives and children for questioning and that so far, no country had sought their extradition.
Pakistan gained custody of bin Laden's family members on Monday after a covert U.S. operation killed the al-Qaida chief at his hideout in the northwestern city of Abbottabad.
Among them was bin Laden's Yemeni-born wife, Amal Ahmed Abdullfattah.
She has told Pakistani investigators that she moved to the home in 2006 and never left the compound.
Pakistan foreign ministry spokeswoman Tahmina Janjua said that neither Yemen or any other country had asked for the extradition of bin Laden's relatives. Pakistani officials, who have not disclosed where the relatives are being held, have said that they will be returned to their countries of origin. The ages of the children have not been disclosed.
Bin Laden led a life on the run, yet he kept his family close. One of his sons, Khalid, was killed during the raid.
Abdullfattah, his youngest wife, was shot in the leg and was initially taken to a military hospital, a Pakistani military official has said. One of his daughters watched her father being slain, he said.
Abdullfattah told interrogators that she had been staying in bin Laden's hideout since 2006 and never left the upper floors of the large, sparsely furnished building, said a Pakistani intelligence official who spoke on condition of anonymity in line with the agency's policy.
CIA officers have not been given access to the women or children in custody, the official said. Their accounts could help shed light on the U.S. military operation that killed the al-Qaida leader and on how he was able to avoid capture for nearly 10 years.


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