Bin Laden's niece poses in racy photo shoot (AP) Updated: 2005-12-24 09:16
Osama bin Laden's niece, in an interview with GQ magazine in which she
appears scantily clad, says she has nothing in common with the al-Qaida leader
and simply wants acceptance by Americans.
"Everyone relates me to that man, and I have nothing to do with him," Wafah
Dufour, the daughter of bin Laden's half brother, Yeslam Binladin, says in the
January edition of the magazine, referring to the al-Qaida leader.
Wafah Dufour, niece of Osama bin Laden, poses
in an undated publicity photo released on December 22, 2005, taken during
a photo session for the January 2006 issue of GQ
Magazine.[Reuters] | "I want to be accepted here,
but I feel that everybody's judging me and rejecting me," said the
California-born Dufour, a law graduate who lives in New York. "Come on, where's
the American spirit? Accept me. I want to be embraced, because my values are
like yours. And I'm here. I'm not hiding."
Dufour, who adopted her mother's maiden name after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks
that have been blamed on bin Laden, appears in several provocative photos in the
magazine.
This photo supplied by GQ Magazine shows Wafah
Dufour, the daughter of Osama bin Laden's half brother, posed for an
article of GQ's January edition.[AP] | The
pictures are likely to be considered obscene by conservative Muslims in and
outside of Saudi Arabia where women are required to be veiled.
Asked if she would like to perform her music in the Middle East, Dufour says
her mother, Carmen Dufour, would be too afraid that "someone would want to kill
me."
"Listen, I would love to raise consciousness. Maybe women could hear the
songs and realize that I'm doing my dream and hopefully they can, too," she
said.
Wafah Dufour, niece of Osama bin Laden, poses
in an undated publicity photo released on December 22, 2005, taken during
a photo session for the January 2006 issue of GQ
Magazine.[Reuters] | Yeslam and Osama are among 54
children of the late Saudi construction magnate Mohammed bin Laden and his 22
wives. The extended family includes several hundred people.
Binladin, who received Swiss citizenship in 2001, has condemned his half
brother "for his acts and his convictions." He intentionally spells his name
differently from his half brother.
In the interview, Dufour says she would not date a fundamentalist Muslim and
that she cried hysterically when she witnessed the attacks on New York while
staying with her mother in Geneva.
|