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Meet Noor bin Ladin, the niece of Osama bin Laden who has come out as a Trump supporter and QAnon believer
Meet Noor bin Ladin, the niece of Osama bin Laden who has come out as a Trump supporter and QAnon believer
Ashley CollmanSep 8, 2020, 22:23 IST
Noor bin Laden at The National Theatre on March 2, 2016 in London, England.David M. Benett/Dave Benett/Getty Images
Noor bin Ladin, the 33-year-old niece of Osama bin Laden, recently gave an interview with the New York Post, called for Americans to vote for President Donald Trump.
Osama bin Laden was the mastermind of the September 11, 2001 attacks on the US. He was killed by US Navy SEALs in 2011.
Noor bin Ladin lives in Switzerland, but considers herself "an American at heart."
She said she was "devastated" by the September 11 attacks, which took place when she was 12, and has denounced her uncle who masterminded them.
Here's everything we know about bin Ladin's past and her political beliefs.
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Noor bin Ladin, the 33-year-old niece of terrorist Osama bin Laden, gave an interview with the New York Post last Saturday, and talked about her support for President Donald Trump.
She is the daughter of Yeslam bin Ladin, Osama bin Laden's older half-brother. She comes from a part of the family that has long spelled their last name with an "-in" instead of an "-en."
Yeslam bin Ladin is pictured in Paris in April 2006.
Bertrand Rindoff Petroff/Getty
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Osama and Yeslam shared the same father, Mohammed, a wealthy construction magnate who had more than 50 children. It's not clear if the two half-brothers were close, but Osama has been described as the black sheep of the family.
Osama bin Laden.
Universal History Archive/Getty
Noor's mother is Carmen Dufour, a Swiss author who divorced her husband in 1988, and moved to Switzerland to raise her three daughters.
Carmen Dufour pictured in April 2006.
Eamonn McCabe/Popperfoto via Getty
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Bin Ladin still lives in Switzerland, but told the Post she's "an American at heart" who considers the US her "second home." She said she and her mother used to visit the US multiple times a year before the September 11 attacks.
One of the World Trade Center towers collapsing after being struck by an airplane in the September 11, 2001 attacks.
Ezra Shaw/Getty Images
Noor bin Ladin has distanced herself from her infamous uncle, saying "the name that I carry is antithetical to the values I hold."
Al Qaeda leader and terrorist Osama bin Laden is seen in a video in 1998.
CNN via Getty Images
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Bin Ladin has an interest in American politics, and said she's speaking out now to throw her support behind Trump as he seeks a second term.
Noor bin Laden at The National Theatre on March 2, 2016 in London, England.
David M. Benett/Dave Benett/Getty Images
She recently shared a letter on her website, in which she called Trump "the only leader who can save us from a bleak future."
President Donald Trump walks on the White House South Lawn on June 25, 2020.
Drew Angerer/Getty Images
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Little else is known about bin Ladin, since the New York Post interview is the first time she has spoken with the media. But her Twitter account gives more insight into her political beliefs.
In her tweets, bin Ladin has criticized radical Islam, criticized the wearing of face masks, and thrown her support behind Trump's threats to pull funding for the World Health Organization.
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She has also tweeted about "Obamagate," a groundless conspiracy theory pushed by Trump and his allies in the past.
Then-President-elect Donald Trump meets with then-President Barack Obama in the Oval Office on November 10, 2016.
JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images
She's also pushed another conspiracy theory that claims the Democratic Party was trying to use the coronavirus pandemic to push mail-in voting as a means to win the 2020 election.
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She has also shared posts that mention QAnon, a group of far-right conspiracy theorists. In another tweet, she shared a photo of herself in a "Make America Great Again" onesie, with the hashtag "#QAnon" added.
Bin Ladin regularly retweets the president and other conservatives like Donald Trump Jr., Laura Ingraham, and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. She also routinely shares clips from Sean Hannity and Tucker Carlson's Fox News shows.
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According to bin Ladin's Twitter page, she has had the account since 2010, but her tweets only go back as far as February 2019, and most of her tweets were written in the last six months alone.