International

Wives of Osama are under interrogation in Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: After the Osama encounter Yemini born Amal Ahmed Abdullfattah, and the other two wives of bin Laden are being interrogated in Pakistan after they were taken into custody following the American raid on bin Laden’s compound in the town of Abbottabad

A Pakistani intelligence official said on Friday, one of three wives living with Osama bin Laden has told Pakistani interrogators she had been staying in the al—Qaeda chief’s hideout for six years without leaving its upper floors.
Pakistani authorities are also holding eight or nine children who were found there after the U.S. commandos left. The corpses of at least three slain men were also left behind.

CIA officers had not been given access to the women in custody. Military and intelligence relations between the United States and Pakistan have been strained even before Monday’s helicopter—borne raid, and have become more so in the aftermath.

The Pakistani intelligence official did not say on Friday whether the Yemeni wife has said that bin Laden was also living there since 2006. A security official said she was shot in the leg during the operation, and did not witness her husband being killed.

“We are still getting information from them,” he said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to give his name to the media.

Meanwhile, a senior Pakistani intelligence official said that Osama bin Laden was “cash strapped” in his final days and that al—Qaeda had split into two factions, with the larger one controlled by the group’s No. 2, Ayman al—Zawahri.

The official spoke to a small group of Pakistani reporters late Thursday. Two journalists at the meeting told The Associated Press what the official said, asking their names not be used because of the sensitivity of the meeting.
The official didn’t provide details or elaborate how his agency made the conclusions about bin Laden. The al—Qaeda chief had apparently lived without any guards at the Abbottabad compound or loyalists nearby to take up arms in his defense.

The image of Pakistan’s intelligence agency has been battered in the wake of Monday’s U.S. commando raid that killed bin Laden. Portraying him as isolated and weak may be aimed at trying to deflect attention from that.

Thursday, two Pakistani officials cited the women and children as saying bin Laden and his associates had not offered any “significant resistance” when the American commandos entered the compound, in part because the assailants had thrown “stun bombs” that disorientated them.

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