| World skeptical of bin Laden 'death' (AFP)
 Updated: 2006-09-25 07:28
 The last verified message from bin Laden was posted on the Internet on July 
1, accusing Iraqi Shiites of waging "genocide" against Sunnis. A US official 
said the message was deemed authentic. 
 The last time images of him were seen was in October 2004, in a videotape 
delivered to the Arab television network Al Jazeera. 
 Born in Saudi Arabia to a wealthy family with close ties to the royals, bin 
Laden allegedly funded and directed the September 11, 2001 attacks on New York 
and Washington that killed around 3,000 people. 
 His Al-Qaeda organisation has also been linked to several other attacks, 
including the 1998 US embassy bombings in Africa, a 2000 suicide bomb attack on 
a US warship off Yemen, and the 2004 Madrid train bombings. 
 He has been successfully avoided capture despite the 2001 US-led invasion of 
Afghanistan, which toppled the Taliban regime that had provided him refuge and 
protection, and a 25-million-dollar bounty on his head. 
 Reports have regularly surfaced that the Al-Qaeda leader is in poor health. 
 The latest came from the US newsmagazine Time and the television network CNN 
-- both owned by Time Warner -- which reported on the weekend that bin Laden had 
fallen ill with an unspecified waterborne illness. Both stopped short of saying 
he was dead, however. 
 Time said "a well placed source in Washington" believed the hypothesis of bin 
Laden's death originated with "some Saudi intelligence analysts with no hard 
evidence to back it up. No one at a high level is satisfied it's true." 
 
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