Bin Laden ordered bodyguard to kill him rather than be captured
A FORMER personal bodyguard to Osama Bin Laden has revealed how the Al-Qaeda leader survived at least three assassination attempts during his time in Afghanistan and rejected several requests to return to his native Saudi Arabia including one delivered in person by his mother.
Abu Jindal, 35, a Yemeni who claims to have worked for Bin Laden from 1995- 2000, said he was given the authority to kill the terrorist chief if he seemed about to be taken by his enemies. "I was the only member of his bodyguard who was given this authority," he said when interviewed in Yemen by al-Quds al-Arabi, the London-based Arabic newspaper. "I took care to keep the two bullets in good condition and cleaned them every night ... If enemy forces surrounded Sheikh Osama and there was no possibility that he would escape, I was to kill him before they could catch him alive."
Abu Jindal said there were at least three assassination attempts during his time with Bin Laden in Afghanistan. The first was in 1998 by a young Uzbek, allegedly sent by the Saudis and offered a reward of 2m Saudi riyals £300,000 at today's rates and Saudi nationality. "He was only 18 and had been deceived. He was crying in a very pathetic manner and said, 'I made a mistake'. Finally, Sheikh Osama said to release him."
Following another failed assassination attempt in Jalalabad, Mullah Mohammed Omar, the Taliban leader, convinced Bin Laden to move to the comparative safety of Kandahar in the south. Abu Jindal said Bin Laden and his family were guarded by 14-16 bodyguards who travelled with them at all times.
The Saudis tried many times to coax Bin Laden back to Saudi Arabia. "At one time the Saudi government sent his mother and his half-brother by a special Saudi plane that landed at Kandahar airport," said Abu Jindal.
On another occasion, Prince Turki al-Faisal, now Saudi ambassador in London, arrived in a large aircraft intending to return with Bin Laden and his retinue. "The delegation left without him," said Abu Jindal.
The former bodyguard, whose real name is Nasir Ahmad Nasir al-Bahri, served a short prison term after returning home. He is now free, although closely watched by the intelligence services.
Posted by: Dan Darling 2005-06-06 |