| CAIRO, Egypt - Omar
Osama bin Laden bears a striking
resemblance to his notorious father — except for
the dreadlocks that dangle halfway down his back.
Then there's the
black leather biker jacket. The 26-year-old
does not renounce his father,
al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden, but in an
interview with The Associated Press, he said there
is better way to defend Islam than militancy: Omar
wants to be an "ambassador for peace" between
Muslims and the West.
Omar — one of bin
Laden's 19 children — raised a tabloid storm last
year when he married a 52-year-old British woman,
Jane Felix-Browne, who took the name Zaina Alsabah.
Now the couple say they want to be advocates,
planning a 3,000-mile horse race across North
Africa to draw attention to the cause of peace.
"It's about
changing the ideas of the Western mind. A lot of
people think Arabs — especially the bin Ladens,
especially the sons of Osama — are all terrorists.
This is not the truth," Omar told the AP last week
at a cafe in a
Cairo shopping mall.
Of course, many may
have a hard time getting their mind around the
idea of "bin Laden: peacenik."
"Omar thinks he can
be a negotiator," said Alsabah, who is trying to
bring her husband to
Britain. "He's one of the only people who
can do this in the world."
Omar lived with the
al-Qaida leader in
Sudan, then moved with him to
Afghanistan in 1996.
There, Omar says he
trained at an
al-Qaida camp but in 2000 he decided there
must be another way and he left his father,
returning to his homeland of
Saudi Arabia.
"I don't want to be
in that situation to just fight. I like to find
another way and this other way may be like we do
now, talking," he said in English.
He suggested his
father did not oppose his leaving — and Alsabah
interjected that Omar was courageous in breaking
away, but neither elaborated.
Although there is
no way to confirm the details he describes of his
childhood and upbringing, the strong family
resemblance and Omar's knowledge of Osama's family
life have convinced many of his lineage.
"Omar Bin Laden is
the son of
Osama bin Laden and his first wife, Najwa,"
a U.S. intelligence official said Thursday,
speaking on condition of anonymity because he was
not authorized to talk to the media. The official
confirmed Omar was raised in Sudan and Afghanistan
after his father was forced out of Saudi Arabia.
Omar and his wife
insist they have not been bothered by Egyptian
officials, who said Thursday that the terror
leader's son did not pose a threat.
"He comes and goes
just like any other tourist," said a security
official, also speaking on condition of anonymity
because he was not authorized to speak to the
media. "He is taking a line that is totally
different from him father."
Omar said he hasn't
seen or been in contact with his father since
leaving Afghanistan. "He doesn't have e-mail,"
Omar said. "He doesn't take a telephone ... if he
had something like this, they will find him
through satellites."
Omar doesn't
criticize his father and says Osama bin Laden is
just trying to defend the Islamic world.
"My father thinks
he will be good for defending the Arab people and
stop anyone from hurting the Arab or Muslim people
any place in the world," he said, noting that the
West didn't have a problem with his father when he
was fighting the
Russians in Afghanistan in the 1980s.
Omar is convinced a
truce between the West and
al-Qaida is possible.
"My father is
asking for a truce but I don't think there is any
government (that) respects him. At the same time
they do not respect him, why everywhere in the
world, they want to fight him? There is a
contradiction," he said.
Osama bin Laden,
believed to be in hiding in the
Pakistan-Afghan border region, offered a
truce to
Europe in a 2004 audiotape and a
conditional truce to the United States in a 2006
message. In November, he called on European
nations to pull out of Afghanistan in a message
seen by some experts as an effort to reach out to
Europe.
But in a series of
messages since last fall, he also has been calling
for Muslims to rally around
jihad, or "holy war," encouraging fighters
in
Iraq in particular to continue their
battles with U.S. and Iraqi forces.
At least two of
Osama bin Laden's sons, Hamza and Saad, are
believed to have an active role in al-Qaida — with
Hamza believed to be in the Pakistan-Afghan border
zone and Saad thought to be in
Iran, perhaps in Iranian custody.
But most of the
al-Qaida leader's children, like Omar, live
as legitimate businessmen. The family as a whole
disowned Osama in 1994 when
Saudi Arabia stripped him of his
citizenship because of his militant activities.
The family is
wealthy: Osama bin Laden's billionaire father
Mohammed, who died in 1967, had more than 50
children and founded the Binladen Group, a
construction conglomerate that gets many major
building contracts in the kingdom.
Since leaving his
father's side, Omar has lived in Saudi Arabia,
where he runs a contracting company connected with
the Binladen Group, but he spends much of his time
in
Egypt. It was during a desert horseback
ride at the
Pyramids of Giza that he met his wife.
Their marriage in
April made them tabloid fodder, particularly in
Britain, where headlines touted the "granny
who married Osama bin Laden's son." Alsabah, who
has married five times, has five grandchildren.
The couple has
applied for a visa to Britain. And they are
planning their endurance horse race across North
Africa, which they hope to start in March. It is
in the planning stages — they are seeking approval
of governments along the route and need sponsors
to help pay for the event and raise money for
child victims of war.
Omar said they plan
to ride 30 miles a day, with periodic weeklong
rests in each country.
Teams from around
the world will be encouraged to join in what the
couple envisions as an equine version of the
Paris-Dakar car rally. That rally was canceled
this year due to fears over terrorist threats made
by
al-Qaida-affiliated groups in North Africa.
Omar, however, said
he isn't worried.
"I heard the rally
was stopped because of al-Qaida," he said. "I
don't think they are going to stop me."
|