Osama bin Laden left €27m in will for jihad

Media firms gain access to documents on al-Qaeda leader after US declassifies papers

Osama bin Laden:  laid out in letter composed in the late 1990s  how he wanted to distribute about $29 million he had in Sudan. Photograph: AP Photo
Osama bin Laden: laid out in letter composed in the late 1990s how he wanted to distribute about $29 million he had in Sudan. Photograph: AP Photo

Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden outlined in letters and other documents how at least $29 million (€26.7 million) of his funds and possessions should be apportioned after his death, requesting that most of it be used to continue global jihad.

One of the letters – part of a cache of 113 documents that were taken in the 2011 US special forces raid that killed bin Laden – was described by US intelligence officials as what they believed was a last will.

Reuters and ABC Television were given exclusive access to the documents, which were translated from Arabic and declassified by US intelligence agencies.

They were part of a second tranche of documents that were seized in the operation and have been declassified since last May.

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A large number have yet to be released. One document, a hand-written note that US intelligence officials believe the Saudi militant composed in the late 1990s, laid out how he wanted to distribute about $29 million he had in Sudan.

One per cent of the $29 million, bin Laden wrote, should go to Mahfouz Ould al-Walid, a senior al Qaeda militant who used the nom de guerre Abu Hafs al Mauritani.

“By the way, he (al-Walid) has already received $20,000-30,000 from it, bin Laden continued. “I promised him that I would reward him if he took it out of the Sudani government.”

Bin Laden lived in Sudan for five years as an official guest until he was asked to leave in May 1996 by the then-Islamic fundamentalist government under pressure from the United States.

Another one per cent of the sum should be given to a second associate, Engineer Abu Ibrahim al-Iraqi Sa’ad, for helping set up bin Laden’s first company in Sudan, Wadi al-Aqiq Co, the document said.

Bin Laden urged his close relatives to use the rest of the funds to support holy war.

“I hope for my brothers, sisters and maternal aunts to obey my will and to spend all the money that I have left in Sudan on jihad, for the sake of Allah,” he wrote.

He set down specific amounts in Saudi riyals and gold that should be apportioned between his mother, a son, a daughter, an uncle, and his uncle’s children and maternal aunts.

In a letter dated August 15th, 2008, bin Laden asks that his father take care of his wife and children in the event he died first.

“My precious father: I entrust you well for my wife and children, and that you will always ask about them and follow up on their whereabouts and help them in their marriages and needs,” he wrote.

– (Reuters)