A daughter of Osama bin Laden 12 years old, currently detained in Pakistan along with other children and a wife of his father, he saw the American soldiers killed the leader of Al Qaeda, said an official of the Pakistani secret services (ISI) . The Pakistani army entered the hall one hour after the U.S.
attack and, along with four bullet-riddled bodies found 16 people handcuffed with plastic ties. Of these, nine were children aged between two and 12 years and three women, according to an ISI official and local media. Group, three boys and four were sons of the owners of the house, and Tariq Arshad, respectively, so that the other two were sons of bin Laden, including the daughter of 12 years.
It is she who has told the local press that his father was captured and executed. Of the two women, one is the last wife of the leader of Al Qaeda, Abdulfattah Amal Ahmed, born in Yemen in 1982. Was shot in the leg, allegedly after to intervene to protect bin Laden. It is assumed that the other woman could be the personal health of bin Laden, because it suffered from kidney disease.
After the operation, the U.S. military flew into Afghanistan. They could be relatives of the terrorist leader because they did not have enough seats in the helicopter (the other device the operation was shot down during the attack), according to local media reports. All children are "safe and being cared for in accordance with the law," the Pakistani Foreign Ministry in a statement.
"Some have needed medical care and are being treated in the best possible facilities. Will be delivered to their home countries. " U.S. special forces took only two bodies in the helicopter. It was assumed that one of Bin Laden and the other that of his son. The incident was friction. The relations between the U.S.
and Pakistan, theoretically allies in the "war on terror" suffered a clear deterioration in two days after the death of Bin Laden. By way of explanation for the presence of al Qaeda in his country, Pakistani Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani, said the intelligence services around the world including U.S., they share with Pakistan the failure to capture Osama bin Laden.
"There was a failure of intelligence services around the world, not only in Pakistan," Gilani said from Paris. Instead, the NATO Secretary General, Anders Fogh Rasmussen stressed that Pakistan must improve cooperation. The director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Leon Panetta, said the United States did not inform Pakistan of the operation against Bin Laden because this country "could have alerted" the leader of Al Qaeda's imminent attack.
Given these statements, Pakistan, was upset because the operation took place on its territory without the government knowing it, alleged the violation of its sovereignty, but greeted the death of Bin Laden. A U.S. government report supported the first version emerged of how he died, the leader of Al Qaeda, Osama bin Laden.
The paper narrates the special forces shot the man who was wanted by the United States, after he opened fire to defend themselves during the assault on his hideout. Hours later, sources in Washington were to reveal that the Saudi millionaire was unarmed at the time that soldiers entered the home where he died.
The same U.S. intelligence chief, Leon Panetta, avoided immediate questions about the details about what caused the terrorist was disarmed as the commandos shoot up with others. Panetta said that bin Laden "made threatening gestures" that threatened his men and so they killed him. A new version of what happened said that the leader of Al Qaeda did not die at the hands of U.S.
special forces, but of his own guards who shot to avoid arrest. According to the Pakistani daily The Nation, which quoted official sources told local television, bin Laden was shot dead by his close friend when U.S. troops stormed the residence of Abbottabad. In the latest version, the minor daughter of Osama bin Laden says his father was captured alive and executed by U.S.
forces during the first minutes of the operation launched against a fortified complex Bilal Town, in the town of Abbottabad, according to military officials say in a statement to local media.
attack and, along with four bullet-riddled bodies found 16 people handcuffed with plastic ties. Of these, nine were children aged between two and 12 years and three women, according to an ISI official and local media. Group, three boys and four were sons of the owners of the house, and Tariq Arshad, respectively, so that the other two were sons of bin Laden, including the daughter of 12 years.
It is she who has told the local press that his father was captured and executed. Of the two women, one is the last wife of the leader of Al Qaeda, Abdulfattah Amal Ahmed, born in Yemen in 1982. Was shot in the leg, allegedly after to intervene to protect bin Laden. It is assumed that the other woman could be the personal health of bin Laden, because it suffered from kidney disease.
After the operation, the U.S. military flew into Afghanistan. They could be relatives of the terrorist leader because they did not have enough seats in the helicopter (the other device the operation was shot down during the attack), according to local media reports. All children are "safe and being cared for in accordance with the law," the Pakistani Foreign Ministry in a statement.
"Some have needed medical care and are being treated in the best possible facilities. Will be delivered to their home countries. " U.S. special forces took only two bodies in the helicopter. It was assumed that one of Bin Laden and the other that of his son. The incident was friction. The relations between the U.S.
and Pakistan, theoretically allies in the "war on terror" suffered a clear deterioration in two days after the death of Bin Laden. By way of explanation for the presence of al Qaeda in his country, Pakistani Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani, said the intelligence services around the world including U.S., they share with Pakistan the failure to capture Osama bin Laden.
"There was a failure of intelligence services around the world, not only in Pakistan," Gilani said from Paris. Instead, the NATO Secretary General, Anders Fogh Rasmussen stressed that Pakistan must improve cooperation. The director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Leon Panetta, said the United States did not inform Pakistan of the operation against Bin Laden because this country "could have alerted" the leader of Al Qaeda's imminent attack.
Given these statements, Pakistan, was upset because the operation took place on its territory without the government knowing it, alleged the violation of its sovereignty, but greeted the death of Bin Laden. A U.S. government report supported the first version emerged of how he died, the leader of Al Qaeda, Osama bin Laden.
The paper narrates the special forces shot the man who was wanted by the United States, after he opened fire to defend themselves during the assault on his hideout. Hours later, sources in Washington were to reveal that the Saudi millionaire was unarmed at the time that soldiers entered the home where he died.
The same U.S. intelligence chief, Leon Panetta, avoided immediate questions about the details about what caused the terrorist was disarmed as the commandos shoot up with others. Panetta said that bin Laden "made threatening gestures" that threatened his men and so they killed him. A new version of what happened said that the leader of Al Qaeda did not die at the hands of U.S.
special forces, but of his own guards who shot to avoid arrest. According to the Pakistani daily The Nation, which quoted official sources told local television, bin Laden was shot dead by his close friend when U.S. troops stormed the residence of Abbottabad. In the latest version, the minor daughter of Osama bin Laden says his father was captured alive and executed by U.S.
forces during the first minutes of the operation launched against a fortified complex Bilal Town, in the town of Abbottabad, according to military officials say in a statement to local media.
- With Osama Dead, Taliban, al-Qaeda May Part Ways (05/05/2011)
- Commando Mission Was to Kill, Not to Capture Osama Bin Laden | Cia's "Almost Certain" That Al-qaeda Will Try to Get Revenge on Bin Laden (05/05/2011)
- You: Fight against al-Qaeda not over, Clinton warns (05/05/2011)
- Al-Qaeda Deaths: 2 Mid-Level Leaders Killed In Yemen (05/05/2011)
- Osama Bin Laden dead: 2 Al Qaeda leaders killed by 'US drone strike' in Yemen (05/05/2011)
Al-Qaeda (wikipedia)  
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