Osama bin Laden arrived in Sudan in 1991 after falling out with
Saudi Arabia's ruling family over their support for the United States in the
Gulf War against
Iraq. He purchased this property and another in
Soba, a one-storey unfurnished mud house on the western bank overlooking the
Blue Nile where he spent many weekends with his family. He lived in Sudan with his four wives, four sons and daughter. During his time in the country he heavily invested in the infrastructure and in agriculture and businesses. When he lived there he was more known as a "walking bank" than a successful organizer of terrorist operations.
Hassan al-Turabi allowed bin Laden to live in Sudan on the condition that he would invest in Sudan. It is estimated that he may have invested US$50 million in Sudan. His investments consisted of
his militant activity, a bank, trading firm,
Wadi al Aqiq, construction industry, which built roads throughout North Sudan, and the largest of all was the
Al-Damazin Farms which employed 4,000 people, near the
Upper Nile region close to the Ethiopian border. All of these activities he managed with his nine-room office manned by veteran business men supported by 400 Sudanese men at a salary of $200 a month. bin Laden once missed an assassination attempt at this house attempted by
Takfiris, an ultra extremist group who considered bin Laden's ways as
heretic. Following this attack, his house was made more secure with more guards and
trenches dug in front and back of the house. This caused inconvenience to his neighbours who then wished that bin Laden would leave their neighbourhood. It was reported that the Chinese embassy took over the property as a residence in the years after bin Laden's departure, but by 2011 it was said to have remained vacant since bin Laden was expelled from the country in 1996 because tenants feared that the United States might bomb it. ==Description==