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Osama bin Laden Asalnya Seorang Budak Baik.

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Post time 13-4-2012 12:50 PM | Show all posts |Read mode
Osama bin Laden: the tale of a Saudi-born heir to a construction company who founded al-Qaeda
Sporting a pair of electric blue flares and a skinny-rib green jumper, Osama   bin Laden looks the epitome of a normal teenager as he poses next to a pink   Cadillac during a family trip to the town of Falun in Sweden.


                                                                                        Osama bin Laden (second from right) pictured in 1971 in Sweden Photo: SCANPIX



                                                                                        Osama bin Laden: the Al-Qaeda leader killed by US special forces at compound just 800 yards from Pakistan's 'Sandhurst' officer training HQ.




The photograph was taken in 1971 when he was aged just 14. With a broad grin   on his face, the young Osama   bin Laden appears no different from any of the other happy, relaxed and   carefree adolescents in the picture.

Over the next three decades however, bin Laden underwent a transformation so   profound that he became one of the most feared, and hated, men in history;   the world’s most wanted man and the architect of a new brand of global   terrorism that changed the entire political landscape and led to the deaths   of thousands of innocent people.

As the photograph illustrates, bin Laden’s life story is one of   contradictions. As a young man he enjoyed considerable affluence and his   early life yields few clues as to why he should have turned into the leader   of the world’s most devastating terrorist movement.

Born in Riyadh on March 10, 1957, Osama bin Laden was son of a self-made   billionaire and the 17th of 52 children.

His father, Mohammed bin Laden, had started out as an illiterate dockside   labourer in Yemen. However, he became immensely wealthy after travelling to   the newly created kingdom of Saudi   Arabia and founding his own construction company which, after the   discovery of oil in the Arabian Peninsula, grew into one of the biggest   construction conglomerates in the Middle East, building palaces for the   royal elite, vast highways across the desert even and holy shrines.

He boasted that, using his private helicopter, he could visit the three   holiest locations in Islam - Mecca, Medina and the Al-Asqa mosque in   Jerusalem - in a single day. He became so wealthy that when the Saudi Royal   family found itself unable to pay civil servants in 1964 he stepped in and   picked up the bill.
Osama bin Laden’s Syrian-born mother, Hamida Alia Ghanoum, was Mohammed’s   tenth spouse and shunned the Saudi veil in favour of high-end fashion. This,   coupled with the fact she was foreign, diminished her status within the   family.
Bin Laden grew up with the rest of his father’s wives and children at a palace   in Jeddah, and was described by one of his teachers as a “shy, retiring,   gracious and courteous boy” who was “very neat, precise and conscientious in   his work”.
Although raised in an atmosphere of Sunni Muslim piety, the bin Laden family   were exposed to western influences. According to his childhood friends he   liked western films, particularly karate movies starring Bruce Lee, loved   playing football and visited several European countries, including Sweden.   According to some reports he was a keen supporter of Arsenal, the north   London club.
When bin Laden was 10 his father was killed in a helicopter crash and he   reportedly inherited $20 million. Most of bin Laden’s siblings were educated   in the West, spending their formative years in London, Sweden or the US. Bin   Laden, however, opted to remain in Jeddah and it was there where he began to   take a much keener interest in religion.
He attended the King Abdul Aziz university in Jeddah, where he studied   economics and public administration. He preferred the compulsory Islamic   studies part of his course, and was increasingly exposed to the radical   fringe of contemporary Islam and the teachings of an extremist Islamic   thinker, Abdullah Azzam. He was also inspired by the writings of Sayyib   Qutb, a major figure in radical Islam who said that true Muslims must free   themselves by jihad.
In 1979, as his religious views hardened, he found the cause that was to   change his life – the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Immediately after the   Soviet invasion, Azzam issued a fatwa declaring that the Afghan struggle was   a jihad and it was every Muslim’s duty to join. He moved to Peshawar,   Pakistan, where Bin Laden joined him, furious at the way Muslims were being   suppressed by the Russians. “I was so enraged I went there at once,” Bin   Laden later told interviewers.
Over the next four years Bin Laden divided his time between Peshawar and Saudi   Arabia, returning home to lobby brothers, relatives and old school friends   to support the fight against the Soviets. By 1984 he was spending most of   his time in Peshawar, where he became known as the “Good Samaritan”, turning   up unannounced at Muslim hospitals where wounded Afghan and Arab fighters   were being treated and distributing cashew nuts and chocolates. He later   sent their families cheques.
By the late 1980s bin Laden was actively involved in fighting in Afghanistan.   He used the family business to help build militant camps and hideaways in   the Afghan mountains, and throughout the 1980s he was careful to nurture the   image of himself as an Arab devoted to fighting the Soviets, modelling   himself on the great medieval Muslim leader Saladin.
He produced documentaries in which he was filmed eating poor food and living   in caves in the Afghan hills, impressing potential donors and inspiring a   new generation of recruits in the Middle East.
In 1988, with the Soviet’s in retreat, he established al-Qaeda   – meaning 'the base’ in Arabic – a new organisation that would wage jihad   beyond the borders of Afghanistan.
A year later his forces were involved in the siege of Jalalabad, gaining   notoriety after executing 60 surrendering communists, cutting their corpses   up and sending the remains back to the city in a truck.
After the Soviet retreat he returned to Saudi Arabia, disillusioned by the   inability of various Afghan groups to settle their differences. He was given   new direction, however, by the US invasion of Kuwait and Iraq and Saudi   Arabia’s decision to let the Western military coalition use its territory.
He vociferously castigated the Saudi royal family for supporting the coalition   and was eventually stripped of his citizenship in 1994 for “irresponsible   behaviour”. He moved his base to Sudan, but was forced to leave for   Afghanistan to live in Kandahar, where he set up a series of terrorist   “universities”.
Throughout this period, al-Qaeda was blossoming into one of the world’s worst   terrorist organisations. In December 1992 al-Qaeda operatives exploded a   bomb in a hotel in Yemen which had only recently been vacated by Afghan   troops. The following year he allegedly provided financial support for the   bombing of the World Trade Centre, which killed seven people and injured   700.
Despite his hatred of the West, bin Laden had a long-standing affiliation with   Britain. As a teenager he became an Arsenal fan and a number of his brothers   and other relatives owned properties in the capital in the mid 1990s.
In 1994 he sent one of his closest aides, Khalid al-Fawwaz, to London to set   up an Al-Qaeda media organ. The following year, after being forced to   abandon his base in Sudan, he even sought asylum in Britain but was turned   down.
By 1995, he was one of the world’s most wanted men, linked to an assassination   attempt on President Mubarak of Egypt and making repeated calls for   guerrilla attacks on US forces. Bill Clinton, the then President, called for   the use of “all and any means” to destroy bin Laden’s terrorist network”.
The bloodshed, however, continued unabated. In 1998 two bombs planted in the   US embassies in the capitals of Tanzania and Kenya killed 224 people. Two   years later al-Qaeda killed 19 sailors after ramming the USS Cole, a   warship, with an explosive packed rubber boat while it was refuelling in   Aden, Yemen.
On September 11, 2001, he sponsored the suicide attacks on the World Trade   Centre. Two large airliners, laden with fuel and passengers for long-haul   flights, were crashed into the twin towers, which subsequently collapsed,   killing everyone who had failed to escape.
The US government offered a reward of $25 million for information leading to   his capture or death, and a month later launched an invasion of Afghanistan   with the stated objective of killing bin Laden, destroying al-Qaeda and   removing the Taliban regime which had given them sanctuary.
For a decade he eluded US forces, becoming a figure of near mythic status and   a symbol of international terrorism for both his supporters and the West.   Whether the stark reality of his death will finally spell the end of   al-Qaeda however, remains to be seen.

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Post time 13-4-2012 02:56 PM | Show all posts
beliau seorang anak yg baik... hormat org tua... sentiasa bertutur lembut....

mcm kenal je ayat ni
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Post time 13-4-2012 04:57 PM | Show all posts
George W. Bush pun asalnya seorang budak yang baik gak...
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Post time 13-4-2012 05:56 PM | Show all posts
Semuanya pun berasal dari budak yang baik
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Post time 13-4-2012 09:40 PM | Show all posts
perogol...peragut... penyamun... time kecek kecek dulu pun sumanya baik baik belako
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Post time 13-4-2012 11:54 PM | Show all posts
hahhhhahhahha.. bace je la.. kite mana tau ape yg betul pun..
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Post time 13-4-2012 11:59 PM | Show all posts
perogol...peragut... penyamun... time kecek kecek dulu pun sumanya baik baik belako
HaMiZiE Post at 13-4-2012 21:40



tak jugak... mmg ade playboy, peragut, penyamun dr kecik dh tunjuk bunga2 jdi camtu.  
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Post time 14-4-2012 01:15 AM | Show all posts
baca boley percaya jgn...
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Post time 14-4-2012 01:25 AM | Show all posts
yada yada yada..same old same old
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