The "exhaustive interview" of Bin Laden's three widows and two of his daughters took place on Tuesday, the commission announced in a brief statement.
Officials refused to divulge any further details.
Pakistan took custody of Bin Laden's widows, two Saudis and one Yemeni, and around 10 of their children, after US Navy SEALs killed him and flew off with his body from Abbottabad.
The incident plunged US-Pakistani relations into crisis.
Initial efforts to repatriate the women and children ran aground when the commission in July ordered them to remain in Pakistan until further notice, indicating that it wanted to question them in relation to its inquiries.
The commission also interviewed the head of Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency, Ahmad Shuja Pasha, on Wednesday and would question him again on Thursday, it said.
(Read: “Bin Laden raid: ISI officials brief Abbottabad commission on US raid”)
Questioning of a serving ISI chief by a civilian panel is extremely rare Pakistan where military intelligence is both feared and respected in equal measures and where the power of the army outstrips that of civilian leaders.
The discovery that Bin Laden lived in Abbottabad, seemingly for five years, and the unilateral American raid have been described by critics as the military's worst disaster since Bangladesh separated from the country in 1971.
On Tuesday, members of the commission interviewed Doctor Shakil Afridi, a government surgeon who is being questioned over a free vaccination campaign he reportedly launched in March-April in the bin Laden’s neighbourhood.
Security officials in the area believe the doctor may have known about bin Laden's presence and shared the information with US intelligence agents.
The commission has the power to summon military and civilian leaders.
The commission is tasked with investigating the "full facts" regarding Bin Laden's presence in Pakistan, the circumstances of the American raid that killed him and the lapses "if any" of Pakistani authorities.
COMMENTS (15)
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@malik: First of the block
OBL was never in Pakistan and this everyone one knows. The supposed 'wives' and 'relatives' are actually out of work actresses. US is paying Pak heavily just to concoct these stories. My uncle in the army says 'for every relative of OBL, US is paying 1 million dollar per month.'
If they are really OBL's wives, then why their photographs are not shown? Why can't they be interviewed on TV?
PS: I don't believe any of the crap I wrote above. I am sure someone else will write along the same lines and I just want to pre-empt those guys and I want to be the first....
The Right-WIngers allege OBL was killed long back and the raid was a fake. I wonder what conspiracy theory they can spin about his wives living in Pakistan left by the US troops after the raid.
The denial about OBL achieves many things for the right in Pakistan. 1) They can paint US as evil. 2) They can deny Pakistan has done any wrong, hence they dont have to really question the Pak Establishment and in turn soothe their egos. 3) Their image of the great martial Pak Army stays intact. 4) Can play victim with these theories.
What they cant mask is the fact that there are physical and Human evidence of OBL living in Pakistan.
@Adeel759: Where ever he is his head is in the sand
The whole gist of the story is that one bad ugly terrorist is dead and the world knows that how incapable and incompetent our authorities are. It feels sometimes that our military and the governament protected him at the cost of countless innocent Pakistani lives.
Time to deport these Arabs and all foreigners including Chechens, Uzbeks, Afghanis etc from Pakistan. We have suffered enough due to these undesireable elements.
@Khalis. You must be living in Pluto or Pakistan? I think commission should ask them if OBL took them (Family Members) to Mansehra for SajjI.
obl widows. huh obl wasnt even in pak from where the hell his widow appeared.
or may be nation was misguided again.
If it takes the commission 4mths before they question the wives the report will come out in a few years if ever.
Why cant the finding be made public and end all the conspiracy theories? Why cant an Interview be conducted of all 3 wives of OBL on camera & broadcast on TV? What has the Govt got to hide?
Questioning of a serving ISI chief by a civilian panel is extremely rare Pakistan where military intelligence is both feared and respected in equal measures and where the power of the army outstrips that of civilian leaders . Lack of civilian oversight contributes to many of the problems that Pakistan faces --- the list of alleged nefarious acts by the ISI is long and I suspect that many/most outside of Pakistan believe those allegations.