
The Osama bin Laden cigarette lighter is adorned with his raised, chrome portrait, an embossed “9-11″, sketches of the New York World Trade Center, an approaching airplane, and a big red splotch. When you flick the sleek, metal lighter open, a light-emitting diode illuminates the splotch so it glows bright red on one of the buildings, emphasizing the site of the first crash. Loud, computerized music beeps out a loop of Mozart.
Made in China – as are many of the latest gimmicky Osama bin Laden souvenirs – the butane lighter recently showed up in Cambodia.
“I paid US$2 for it, in the old Soviet market in Phnom Penh,” a Canadian traveler, who asked not to be identified, said in an interview after visiting the Cambodian capital. “One man’s catastrophe is another man’s cheesy souvenir,” he said. “I bought three, for the novelty. I’ll give them to people who would appreciate the irony that they even exist. When you open it, it plays a classical tune. It’s quite freaky, eh?”




