
Trained at al-Qaida camp
Omar, the fourth eldest of Osama bin Laden's 19 children, lived with his father in Sudan, then moved with him to Afghanistan when Khartoum forced out the al-Qaida leader in 1996.Omar says he trained in Afghanistan at an al-Qaida camp, but in 2000 he decided there must be another way and he left his father, returning to his homeland Saudi Arabia."I don't want to be in that situation to just fight. I like to find another way, and this other way may be like we do now, talking," he said in English. He suggested his father did not oppose his leaving-and Alsabah interjected that Omar was courageous in breaking away, but neither elaborated.He said he hasn't seen or been in contact with his father since leaving Afghanistan. "He doesn't have e-mail," Omar said. "He doesn't take a telephone ... if he had something like this, they will find him through satellites."
Sees father as defender of Muslims
Omar doesn't criticize his father and says Osama bin Laden is just trying to defend the Islamic world."My father thinks he will be good for defending the Arab people and stop anyone from hurting the Arab or Muslim people any place in the world," he said, noting that the West didn't have a problem with his father when he was fighting the Russians in Afghanistan in the 1980s.Omar is convinced a truce between the West and al-Qaida is possible."My father is asking for a truce, but I don't think there is any government (that) respects him. At the same time they do not respect him, why everywhere in the world, they want to fight him? There is a contradiction," he said.
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As in the days of Noah....