Cairo - Al Qaeda released a recording of Osama bin Laden in which leader of the Islamist group has leased the revolutions sweeping the Arab world and more called "tyrants" to be reversed for sound posthumously.
Islamists often were conspicuous by their absence in the uprisings largely led by ordinary citizens angered by autocratic, corruption and economic mismanagement.
But bin Laden, who was killed in a U.S. raid on 2 may in Pakistan, supported by the uprisings which began in Tunisia were spread across a large part of the North Africa and the Middle East, saying that the wind of change would envelope the entire Muslim world.
Al Qaeda had said Ben Laden, who has orchestrated the attacks of September 11, 2001, the United States, recorded a message a week before his death. The audio is included in a video Internet a period of more than 12 minutes and posted on Islamist websites.
In the audio portion, a voice which seems to be of Osama bin Laden referred the uprisings which began in the region of the Maghreb in North Africa.
"The Sun of the revolution has increased the Maghreb". The light of the revolution came from the Tunisia. He has given the peace of the nation and made the faces of the people happy. ?
WINDS OF CHANGE
President Zine al-Abidine Tunisia Ben Ali was overthrown in January, followed by the Egyptian leader Hosni Mubarak after the mass protests centred on Cairo's Tahrir square.
Ben Laden sustained efforts to reverse the most influential of the Muslim world, inviting supporters to "establish an operations room that follows the events and worked in parallel... to save the people who have trouble to break down their tyrants."
"I believe that the wind of change will be envelope across the Muslim world," he said. "Young people must prepare what is necessary and cannot make a decision without consulting those experience and honesty who avoid half solutions."
However, there is no specific reference to the Libya, the Syria and the Yemen, where upheavals are underway. While denouncing Western hegemony, it was not mentioned in the United States, but "Jews became afraid," said by the Arab revolutions.
"Tunisia was the first but quickly the Knights of the Egypt took a spark of the free people of the Tunisia, in Tahrir square," said bin Laden, adding: "He made concerned leaders."
Commandos killed U.S. bin Laden in a house in Abbottabad, a garrison near the Pakistani capital town. The military of Pakistan and spy agencies embarrassed incident led to calls by members of the US Congress for a approach more severe towards the country.
Al Jazeera television, citing Pakistani security sources, said Wednesday that al-Qaeda had appointed Egyptian Saif al-Adel temporary leader after the death of Osama bin Laden.
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