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<math>Insert formula here</math>--[[User:212.68.202.81|212.68.202.81]] 09:50, 2 June 2006 (UTC)
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[[Image:Bin Ladin.jpg|thumbnail|300px|right|Office building of the bin Ladin family. Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Photo by [[User:bertilvidet|Bertil Videt]]]]
[[Image:Bin Ladin.jpg|thumbnail|300px|right|Office building of the bin Ladin family. Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Photo by [[User:bertilvidet|Bertil Videt]]]]
The immensely wealthy '''bin Laden family''' ({{lang-ar|بن لادن}}), intimately connected with the innermost circles of the [[House of Saud|Saudi royal family]] was thrown into prominence through the activities of [[Osama bin Laden]]. The bin Laden family own and operate a global corporation annually grossing 5 billion [[United States dollar|U.S. dollars]], based upon the largest construction firm in the Islamic world, with offices in London and Geneva. [http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/?011112fa_FACT3]
The immensely wealthy '''bin Laden family''' ({{lang-ar|بن لادن}}), intimately connected with the innermost circles of the [[House of Saud|Saudi royal family]] was thrown into prominence through the activities of [[Osama bin Laden]]. The bin Laden family own and operate a global corporation annually grossing 5 billion [[United States dollar|U.S. dollars]], based upon the largest construction firm in the Islamic world, with offices in London and Geneva. [http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/?011112fa_FACT3]

Revision as of 09:50, 2 June 2006

--212.68.202.81 09:50, 2 June 2006 (UTC)



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Office building of the bin Ladin family. Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Photo by Bertil Videt

The immensely wealthy bin Laden family (Arabic: بن لادن), intimately connected with the innermost circles of the Saudi royal family was thrown into prominence through the activities of Osama bin Laden. The bin Laden family own and operate a global corporation annually grossing 5 billion U.S. dollars, based upon the largest construction firm in the Islamic world, with offices in London and Geneva. [1]

The family traces its origins in Saudi Arabia to Sheikh Mohammed bin Laden (died 1967), a native of the Chafeite (Sunni) Hadramaut coast in Yemen, who emigrated to Arabia before World War I. He came to Abdul Aziz ibn Saud's attention through construction projects and was awarded contracts for major renovations at Mecca, where he made his initial fortune from exclusive rights to all mosque and other religious building construction not only in Saudi Arabia, but as far as Ibn Saud's influence reached. Until his death, Mohammed bin Laden had exclusive control over restorations at the Al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem. Soon the bin Laden corporate network extended far beyond construction sites.

Mohammed's special intimacy with the monarchy was inherited by the younger bin Laden generation. Mohammed's sons attended Victoria College, Alexandria Egypt. Their schoolmates included King Hussein of Jordan, Zaid Al Rifai, the Kashoggi brothers (whose father was one of the king's physicians), Kamal Adham (who ran the Saudi security services under King Faisal), present-day contractors Mohammed Al Attas, Fahd Shobokshi and Ghassan Sakr and even actor Omar Sharif.

When Mohammed bin Laden died in 1967, his son Salem bin Laden took over the family enterprises. Salem was one of at least 54 children by various wives. The groupings of the family, based on the nationalities of the wives, include a "Syrian group", a "Lebanese group," and an "Egyptian group". The Egyptian group employs 40,000 people as that country's largest private foreign investor.

The Mecca event

The bin Laden connection with the House of Saud was severely strained in 1979, when pro-Iranian Islamist insurgents briefly took control of the mosque at Mecca. Trucks owned by the family had been used to smuggle arms into the tightly controlled city. Mahrous bin Laden had been the enabler, working with the Islamist insurgency. His connection was through the son of a Sultan of Yemen who had been radicalized by Syrian members of the Muslim Brotherhood. Mahrous was actually arrested for a time, but is now managing the Medina branch of the bin Laden enterprises.

Bin Ladens and King Fahd

The two closest friends of King Fahd were Prince Mohammed ben Abdullah (son of Abdul Aziz ibn Saud's youngest brother) who died in the early 1980s and Salem bin Laden who died in 1988, when a plane that he was flying flew into some powerlines in San Antonio, Texas. PBS "Frontline".

Business connections of the Bush and bin Laden families

Michael Moore's highly critical documentary Fahrenheit 9/11 alleges strong business connections between the Bush political family and the bin Laden family. Moore based most of his claims on Craig Unger's House of Bush, House of Saud which relates how Salem bin Laden invested through James R. Bath, the sole U.S. business representative for Salem bin Laden, some money in Arbusto Energy, a company run by George W. Bush [2].

On the morning of September 11, 2001, George W. Bush's father, George H.W. Bush, was meetingwith Osama bin Laden's brother, Shafig bin Laden, in the Ritz-Carlton Hotel, Washington, on Carlyle Group business. Two days later, thirteen members of the Bin Laden family were allowed by the White House to fly out of the US while most other aircraft were grounded.

Although it had distanced itself from their former brother and company employee, The Saudi Binladin Group's corporate website [3], coincidentally also had expired on September 11, 2001, the same day as the attacks in the United States.

The Saudi Arabian relatives of Osama bin Laden (not Osama bin Laden himself) were also minor investors in Carlyle Group, of which the Bush family is affiliated, until October 2001 when the family sold its $2.02 million investment back to the firm in light of the public controversy surrounding the bin Laden family after September 11th.

After September 11, 2001

Some two dozen members of the bin Laden family, most of them students, were in the United States at the time of the September 11, 2001 attacks. Saudi Embassy officials, fearing reprisals, gathered the group together and, with approval from the F.B.I., flew them by private jet from Los Angeles to Orlando, then on to Washington, and finally to Boston where they were kept in seclusion. As soon as the F.A.A. permitted overseas flights, the bin Laden jet flew to Europe.