CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- A half brother of Osama bin Laden who remained in Boston after the Sept. 11 attacks says he lives in fear he will be blamed for the terrorist acts, which he condemns.
Abdullah Mohammed Binladin, 35, stayed behind when 11 members of his family boarded a chartered jet for Saudi Arabia.
But since Sept. 11, he has stopped using credit cards, stopped jogging along the Charles River and avoids strangers who might hear his name and become upset. He has also suspended his hobby of flying single-engine planes, fearing the reaction he might get.
"Our name is being hijacked," he told the Boston Sunday Globe.
Binladin, who says most of the family uses that spelling, is one of 54 children born to wives of the late Mohammed Bin-Awad Binladin. The family disowned Osama bin Laden in 1994, and Binladin says they have no connections with him.
"In the early 1990s, the family repeatedly reached out and made attempts to plead with Osama to moderate his views," Binladin said. "After these attempts failed, there was a reluctant but unanimous consent that Osama should be disowned."
Binladin learned of the terrorist attacks while buying coffee and watched on television as the second plane crash into the World Trade Center. Soon after, Osama bin Laden was being named the prime suspect.
"I felt sad, that this is a tragedy for humanity," he said.
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