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Bin Laden’s relatives get short prison sentence

In this photo taken Thursday, March 8, 2012, Afghan refugees gather outside the house in Haripur, Pakistan, that Pakistan's intelligence agency believes Osama bin Laden lived in for nearly a year until he moved into the villa where he was eventually killed. The home in the frontier town of Haripur was used by bin Laden while he waited for construction crews to finish his new home in the garrison town of Abbottabad, just 30 kilometers (18 miles) away. The graffiti at right reads, "journey with persistence in light and congregation in Punjab Universality Lahore called by an Islamic students group Islami Jamaiat Tulba, Haripur." (AP Photo/Anjum Naveed)

By ZARAR KHAN | Associated Press

ISLAMABAD (AP) — A Pakistani  court on Monday convicted Osama bin Laden’s three widows and two of his daughters of illegally entering and living in the country and sentenced them to 45 days in prison, with credit for time served, their lawyer said.

In this photo taken Thursday, March 8, 2012, Afghan refugees gather outside the house in Haripur, Pakistan, that Pakistan’s intelligence agency believes Osama bin Laden lived in for nearly a year until he moved into the villa where he was eventually killed. The home in the frontier town of Haripur was used by bin Laden while he waited for construction crews to finish his new home in the garrison town of Abbottabad, just 30 kilometers (18 miles) away. The graffiti at right reads, “journey with persistence in light and congregation in Punjab Universality Lahore called by an Islamic students group Islami Jamaiat Tulba, Haripur.” (AP Photo/Anjum Naveed)

The five women have been in detention since last May when U.S. commandos killed the al-Qaida chief at the walled compound in the Pakistani town of Abbottabad where he had been living with his family for six years.

Pakistani authorities formally arrested the women on March 3, so they will serve another two weeks in prison and then will be deported to their home countries along with the family’s younger children, said their lawyer, Mohammed Amir Khalil. Two of the widows are Saudi and one is Yemeni, he said.

Khalil said Yemen has consented to the return, but he is still in discussions with Saudi officials. Saudi Arabia stripped bin Laden of his citizenship in 1994 because of his verbal attacks against the Saudi royal family.

The five women were also ordered to pay a fine of about $110 each, which has already been done, said Khalil. The lawyer does not plan to appeal the court’s ruling.

Islamabad was outraged by the U.S. raid that killed bin Laden because it was not told about it beforehand. Pakistani officials have said they had no idea the al-Qaida chief was in Abbottabad, something many in Washington found hard to believe because his compound was located close to Pakistan’s equivalent of West Point.

The U.S. has not found any evidence indicating senior Pakistani officials knew of bin Laden’s whereabouts.

But details uncovered recently from the interrogation of his 30-year-old Yemeni wife, Amal Ahmed Abdel-Fatah al-Sada, raised fresh questions about how bin Laden was able to remain undetected for so long in Pakistan after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, despite being the subject of a massive international manhunt.

After leaving Afghanistan, bin Laden lived in five safe houses over the course of nine years while on the run in Pakistan and fathered four children – two of them born in government hospitals, according to al-Sada’s interrogation report, which was obtained by The Associated Press.

Al-Sada’s account says she flew to Pakistan in 2000 and traveled to Afghanistan where she married bin Laden before the Sept. 11 attacks.

After that, the family “scattered” and she traveled to Karachi in Pakistan. She later met up with bin Laden in Peshawar and then moved to the Swat Valley, where they lived in two houses. They moved one more time before settling in Abbottabad in 2005.

her children were born in government hospitals, but that she stayed only “two or three hours” in the clinics on both occasions. The charge sheet against the three women says that they gave officials fake identities.

Pakistan’s army faced rare domestic criticism following the U.S. raid that killed bin Laden because they were powerless to stop it. Citizens also said bin Laden’s presence in the country for so long either pointed to the military’s incompetence or complicity.

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