Eau De Bin Laden at £55 a Go
It is unlikely to be available in the mountains of Pakistan. But should Osama bin Laden ever emerge from his hiding place, he might do worse than to freshen up with a new brand of family perfume. Osama's lesser-known half-brother Yeslam has just launched his own brand of scent...
It is unlikely to be available in the mountains of Pakistan. But should Osama bin Laden ever emerge from his hiding place, he might do worse than to freshen up with a new brand of family perfume.
Osama's lesser-known half-brother Yeslam has just launched his own brand of scent.
Entitled simply Yeslam rather than Bin Laden, the perfume will soon be available in Europe and possibly even in the US.
"My scent is more flowery. It reminds me of memories of my childhood in Saudi Arabia," Mr Bin Laden told Switzerland's Facts magazine last week. Asked if he had contemplated calling it Bin Laden instead, he replied: "That would have been clumsy."
A wealthy businessman, Yeslam bin Laden has not seen his notorious half-brother since 1981. He has lived in Switzerland for the past two decades, and acquired Swiss citizenship in May 2001, just before the September 11 attacks. Mr Bin Laden said he was confident people would buy the perfume, which costs $103 a bottle.
The original idea to market it under the Bin Laden family name was dropped after 9/11, he added. "I could not use Bin Laden any more and Yeslam is a rare name. It means bliss, although there is no single translation," he said.
After Osama, Yeslam is probably the best-known member of the huge Bin Laden clan, largely thanks to an unflattering memoir written by his former wife, Carmen, published last year.
In the book, The Veiled Kingdom, Mrs Bin Laden describes her experience of living with her in-laws in Saudi Arabia as oppressive.
She also describes her ex-husband as "always a Saudi" despite his nationality. He was "self-centred, arrogant, and dismissive", she writes.
Osama's lesser-known half-brother Yeslam has just launched his own brand of scent.
Entitled simply Yeslam rather than Bin Laden, the perfume will soon be available in Europe and possibly even in the US.
"My scent is more flowery. It reminds me of memories of my childhood in Saudi Arabia," Mr Bin Laden told Switzerland's Facts magazine last week. Asked if he had contemplated calling it Bin Laden instead, he replied: "That would have been clumsy."
A wealthy businessman, Yeslam bin Laden has not seen his notorious half-brother since 1981. He has lived in Switzerland for the past two decades, and acquired Swiss citizenship in May 2001, just before the September 11 attacks. Mr Bin Laden said he was confident people would buy the perfume, which costs $103 a bottle.
The original idea to market it under the Bin Laden family name was dropped after 9/11, he added. "I could not use Bin Laden any more and Yeslam is a rare name. It means bliss, although there is no single translation," he said.
After Osama, Yeslam is probably the best-known member of the huge Bin Laden clan, largely thanks to an unflattering memoir written by his former wife, Carmen, published last year.
In the book, The Veiled Kingdom, Mrs Bin Laden describes her experience of living with her in-laws in Saudi Arabia as oppressive.
She also describes her ex-husband as "always a Saudi" despite his nationality. He was "self-centred, arrogant, and dismissive", she writes.

Use the feedback form below to submit your comments.

Use the form below to email this article to your friends.

- New Bin Laden Tape Warns Sunnis Against Working With Us
- Pop Career for Bin Laden Niece
- Full text: bin Laden's 'letter to America'
- Bin Laden: Europe Must Quit Afghanistan
- Change of Tone in Bin Laden's Latest Message
- Bin Laden Tape Urges Uprising Against 'infidel' Musharraf As Poll Date is Set
- Bin Laden Takes Liberties With Contents of Guardian Video
- Osama Bin Laden is Alive and Well, Says Taliban Leader
- A Boost for Bin Laden
- Conjecture Over Bin Laden Death
- Spy Chiefs to Probe 'osama is Dead' Claim
- Village Where Osama Bin Laden Plotted 'a Terrible Calamity'
- Where is Osama Bin Laden?
- Al-Qaida Tape Warns of New Attacks
- Video Claims to Show Bin Laden With 9/11 Plotters
- Simon Tisdall: Bush and Bin Laden Locked in an Embrace
- Bin Laden's Deputy Calls for Global War on 'crusaders'



