@Aniara Aniara schrieb:Naja, also wenn der Schwiegersohn nichts hätte ausplaudern können, wer dann?
Schwiegersohn? Wie kommstn darauf?
Wurde hier nicht oft schon festgestellt, dass die Familie recht verstritten war?
"The Bin Laden family disowned black sheep Osama in 1994"
Mal nett zu lesen:
http://www.spiegel.de/international/spiegel/meet-the-bin-ladens-osama-s-road-to-riches-and-terror-a-359690.htmlIn a statement issued Friday night, the head of the Binladin family, Abdullah Awad Obood bin Laden, Osama's uncle, reiterated that the family "has no connection with his works and activities" and expressed "the strongest denunciation and condemnation of this sad event, which resulted in the loss of many innocent men, women, and children, and which contradicts our Islamic faith."
Nevertheless, U.S. specialists believe there are personal contacts between Mr. bin Laden and some family members. "Some of the brothers keep in touch" with Mr. bin Laden, says Yossef Bodansky, staff director of a congressional task force on terrorism.
"After all, they're family."
However, Mr. Bodansky says, siblings don't fund Mr. bin Laden, nor do they abet his alleged terrorist activities. The brothers "have no security- or loyalty-related problems" in Saudi Arabia, Mr. Bodansky says.
"The vast bulk of the family hate him with quite a passion right now," says Adil Najam, an assistant professor of international relations at Boston University. "But it's a very big clan, and there may well be some who have maintained some contact with him, either familial or ideological."
http://www.1union1.com/posts2.html (Archiv-Version vom 07.01.2012)Er sollte wohl 50 oder 60 Millionen vom Vater erben, hat das Geld aber nie gesehen, wurde enterbt und gemieden. Sicher ist wohl nur, dass er zu ausgewählten sehr engen familiären Kreisen wie seinen Brüdern Kontakt hatte.
Da hat eher die BinLadenGoup schöne Geschäfte gemacht:
Bspw:
Salem bin Laden established the company's ties to the American political elite when, according to French intelligence sources, he helped the Reagan administration circumvent the US Senate and funnel $34 million to the right-wing Contra rebels operating in Nicaragua. He also developed close ties with the Bush family in Texas. But Salem's successors, not Salem, were the ones who were able to fully capitalize on these connections. In 1988, Salem died in a plane crash near San Antonio, Texas, when the aircraft he was piloted became entangled in a power line. After Salem's death, Bakr took control of SBG.
Aber gut:
Osama also stayed in touch with his friends from the Saudi intelligence agency, even after Libya issued a warrant for his arrest, charging bin Laden with alleged involvement in the murder of two Germans -- an official working for Germany's Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution and his wife. Prince Turki sent Osama's mother, Hamida, and his brother Bakr to the Sudanese capital, Khartoum, several times to convince Osama to abandon his terrorist activities. The visits were so frequent that Israel's intelligence agency, the Mossad, believed at the time that Osama was a Saudi spy. Washington increasingly came under pressure to do something about OBL, especially after his involvement in attacks in Somalia and Yemen. The US government met with Saudi officials behind the scenes, confronting them with satellite images of al-Qaida training camps in northern Sudan. In April 1994, King Fahd finally revoked Osama bin Laden's Saudi Arabian citizenship. The bin Laden family followed suit, issuing a sparse, two-sentence statement, signed by Bakr, disowning Osama.
Despite these actions, OBL was still far from being a "black sheep" with no ties to his native country. Saudi intelligence chief Prince Turki visited bin Laden several times after he had moved from Sudan to Afghanistan to join forces with the radical Taliban. Turki allegedly brought along expensive gifts to Kandahar, in the form of dozens of pickup trucks. According to a former member of the Taliban intelligence service, Prince Turki and OBL made a deal: The Saudis would support al-Qaida financially, but only under the condition that there would be no attacks on Saudi soil.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/spiegel/meet-the-bin-ladens-part-ii-tracking-osama-s-kin-around-the-world-a-359831.htmlHeißt das Letzte nun, dass der Saudische Geheimdienst Al Qaida finanzierte?
@Africanus Africanus schrieb:ob im Fall Osama bin Laden das normale Strafrecht zur Anwendung kommt oder das Kriegsrecht.
Vielleicht das Erschießen- und Übermeerbestattungsrecht