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Las Víctimas de la Inquisición estadounidense

The following testimony, entitled “Victims of the American Inquisition” written by Zachary Chesser, is a microcosmic documentation of America’s naked and larger aggression against the religion of Islam in what Chesser terms the ‘American Inquisition.’ Since the intensification of this most recent inquisition, the global Muslim community has suffered a ruthless assault on legal rights and basic humanity, which in various arenas have been superficially designated as everything from geopolitical interests to heretical rhetoric. What Chesser exposes through details regarding his case and subsequent incarceration, is a pattern of federally sanctioned religious persecution and corrosive civil rights violations reflective of American foreign policy, shockingly common in so-called terrorism cases. He recounts how his religious beliefs designated him as a target for government surveillance, how this surveillance in turn became a means of distortion and manipulation, culminating in his incarceration and the deliberate alienation of his family, particularly the religiously charged, custodial kidnapping of his son.
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En el nombre de Alá, el Compasivo, el Misericordioso:

Mi nombre es Abu Talha al-Zacarías Amriiki (legalmente “Zachary Adám Chesser “), y lo que sigue no es para tomarse a la ligera. Si se va a saber cuánto estas palabras pueden afectar a mí ya mi familia, entonces la gravedad de este mensaje no se puede escapar. Estoy escribiendo esto con el fin de que nadie debe caer en las mismas trampas y errores como yo, para establecer la prueba para los que dudan, y para rectificar los errores determinados. Tal vez mi ignorancia de la naturaleza de mi situación era una excusa para mí, pero si no, entonces le pido a Dios que me perdone. Sin embargo, después de mí, no creo que nadie va a tener una excusa en estos asuntos si estos eventos se manifiestan a ellos.

Esta es mi historia, y dentro de ella son fragmentos de las historias de muchos otros. Es sólo una relación de lo que yo sé que es verdad a lo mejor de mi capacidad, y estoy seguro de que lo que permanece oculto para mí es mucho peor que la que se hizo claro para mí, pero lo que sí está claro es suficiente para un persona de comprensión. Por lo tanto, que estas páginas se registran en los anales de la historia en los capítulos reservados a la Inquisición estadounidense.

En cuanto a lo que sigue …  Read the rest of this entry »

 

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Victims of the American Inquisition

The following testimony, entitled “Victims of the American Inquisition” written by Zachary Chesser, is a microcosmic documentation of America’s naked and larger aggression against the religion of Islam in what Chesser terms the ‘American Inquisition.’ Since the intensification of this most recent inquisition, the global Muslim community has suffered a ruthless assault on legal rights and basic humanity, which in various arenas have been superficially designated as everything from geopolitical interests to heretical rhetoric. What Chesser exposes through details regarding his case and subsequent incarceration, is a pattern of federally sanctioned religious persecution and corrosive civil rights violations reflective of American foreign policy, shockingly common in so-called terrorism cases. He recounts how his religious beliefs designated him as a target for government surveillance, how this surveillance in turn became a means of distortion and manipulation, culminating in his incarceration and the deliberate alienation of his family, particularly the religiously charged, custodial kidnapping of his son.
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In the name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful:

My name is Abu Talhah Zakariyya al-Amriiki (legally “Zachary Adam Chesser”), and what follows is not to be taken lightly. If you were to know how much these words can affect me and my family, then the gravity of this message would not escape you. I am writing this in order that nobody should fall into the same traps and mistakes as I did, to establish proof for those who doubt, and to rectify certain wrongs. Perhaps my ignorance of the nature of my situation was an excuse for me, but if not, then I ask Allah to forgive me. However, after me, I do not think that anyone will have an excuse in these matters if these events are manifested unto them.

This is my story, and within it are pieces of the stories of many others. It is only a relation of what I know to be true to the best of my ability, and I am sure that what remains hidden from me is far worse than that which was made clear to me, but that which is clear is enough for a person of understanding. Therefore, let these pages be recorded in the annals of history under the chapters reserved for the American Inquisition.

As for what follows…  Read the rest of this entry »

 

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Briton Jermaine Grant Charged Over Kenyan Bomb Plot

A 29-year-old British man has been charged in Kenya with possessing illegal explosive-making material and plotting to explode a bomb. Jermaine Grant and his three Kenyan co-accused denied the charges. Mr Grant, arrested in Mombasa last month, has already been jailed for a year for being in Kenya illegally.

Earlier this week, police spokesman Eric Kiraithe told the BBC that he was being questioned about possible links to the Somali Islamist group al-Shabab.

Such information could also assist us in preventing any possible al-Shabab threat,” Mr Kiraithe said.

In October, Kenya sent troops into Somalia to pursue the al-Qaeda linked group, blaming it for a recent wave of abductions which threatened its tourism industry. Al-Shabab, which controls much of south and central Somalia, denied any involvement and said the Kenyan incursion was an act of war and it would take revenge.

The BBC’s Jamhuri Mwavyombo in the Kenyan coastal city of Mombasa says Mr Grant appeared in court with three Kenyan co-accused, two men and a woman. Three of the defendants were remanded in custody until the case reconvenes on 20 February, while the woman was granted bail of $228,000 (£149,000), our reporter says.

The charge sheet said as well as possessing bomb-making equipment, they planned to improvise an explosive device with the intention of causing loss of life and harming innocent civilians.

When they entered the courtroom the judge ordered them to stop covering their faces from photographers. After this Mr Grant kept his head down, she says.

Mr Grant, from Newham in east London, was arrested by police in Mombasa before Christmas and pleaded guilty to being in the country illegally and giving false information. Over the weekend, the UK updated to its travel advice on Kenya, warning that extra care should be taken if travelling in the East Africa country as there were threats of an imminent terror attack.

The defendants are scheduled to next appear in court again on 20 February.

 
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Posted by on January 13, 2012 in News Items

 

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Iraq War Veteran Arrested for “Secret” Conversion to Islam & Desire for Hijjrah

A criminal complaint against Craig Benedict Baxam a 24 year old Iraq War veteran of Laurel, Maryland was filed 10 January, accusing him of attempting to provide “material support” to a “designated terrorist organisation” Baxam was arrested on 6 January Friday, 2012, upon his return to Maryland after having travelled abroad on holiday to Africa.

According to the affidavit supporting the complaint, Baxam joined the U.S. Army in 2007 and completed eight months of advanced training for cryptology and intelligence. Baxam was deployed to Baghdad, Iraq and upon completion of his deployment, he reenlisted. In August 2010, he deployed for a one year assignment in Korea. One month prior to completion of his deployment in Korea, Baxam separated from the Army and returned to Maryland in July 2011.

The affidavit alleges that Baxam “secretly converted” to Islam days before he separated from the Army, after finding an Islamic religious website on the Internet. Baxam allegedly decided to relocate to Somalia to join al-Shabaab and live under Sharia law. The implication being that his crime, in part  is his alleged desire to live in Somalia under the governance of Sharia.

Al-Shabaab is a remnant of the Islamic Courts Union (ICU), which came to power in 2006 and was the first government in Somalia to bring peace and stability to the war-torn country in over a decade.  Read the rest of this entry »

 
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Posted by on January 11, 2012 in News Items

 

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Zachary Adam Chesser: October 4, 2011 (‘Pre-Jihad’, al-Awlaki, Marriage & Forum)

بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم

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Brief non-Jihadi Period:

I was being recruited by the organization Hizb ut-Tahrir, so I began to research them. This led me to a bunch of Neo-Salafi websites, and I became a bit influenced by them. At the same time a friend of mine was showing me the same kinds of things himself. I had also just gotten married and learned the FBI was investigating me.

There were many conversations, so it is hard to pinpoint just one, but basically I concluded that all scholars were against jihad. Also, other things I read here and there seemed to fit this notion.

The most effective thing was also the least effective thing, and that was the creation of the notion that there were no scholars who supported jihad anywhere. At first this was convincing, but eventually I learned that almost all scholars supported jihad in most locations including the ones like al-Albani, Ibn B’az, and Ibn ul-‘Uthaymin who are often quoted to prove the opposite. The first perception drove me to accept it, but learning it was false was very thorough in cementing my views.

Additionally, the Neo-salafis have very weak arguments for anyone who wishes to study them in the context of Islamic Jurisprudence. Their opinions are largely taken from specific rulings which they have applied generally. A lot of my posts pointed this out. Even a lot of Neo-Salafis understand this and distance themselves from it. They are the ones who will say: “There is jihad in such-and-such location, but do not go fight, because it is better to do this or that.”

However, these things only served to cement my views. What made me go back was the FBI raiding my house. I was very upset over that. I decided the FBI was more or less evil, that they had abused what I told them, and I resolved to basically just tick them off as much as I could from that day forward.

Religious Approval:

I actually did ask local leaders, but I disagreed with their responses usually. I did not look to al-Awlaki for approval very much either. He certainly influenced me in other matters, but in terms of approval I looked more to bigger scholars like Hamud al-‘Uqla, Ibn Jibrin, and others with and separate from the various groups. I found all of this online.

The word “blessed” in this context sounds very strange to a Muslim, because we do not believe people can bless things unless what you mean is “approve.” Similarly it is very strange to us when people portray Bin Ladin like he was waltzing around the globe looking for a “fatwah” to attack America.

I looked at numerous sources to determine how things were to be applied generally and I concluded that al-Shabaab fit the mould. Al-Awlaki simply put al-Shabaab on the radar for me.

Al-Awlaki:

My emails to al-Awlaki included the following subjects:

Are protests allowed in Islam?, Can I put up anti-war graffiti on government property? Some stories I heard about Afghanistan, and email in 2009 congratulating him if he was killed and saying we will be happier if he was not.

He only responded to the first one, and his conclusion was that if I thought it was beneficial, I should do it, and if not I should not.

There really is not much more to it than that.

Outreach:

████████████████████████ A Secret Service agent asked me some benign questions in the airport, but that does not really count.

Any outreach has to provide an avenue for a person to do something they think is beneficial. You are dealing with people who view their lives as trivial. There is a guy here who was pretty sure that he was in the midst of a sting operation, but he decided that Allah would only look at his heart, not whether or not he was successful, so he went through with it. Find something for them to do, and suggest it to them. Even things like charity work in some underdeveloped country might work.

A letter is not going to dissuade anyone from being generally supportive of anything, but it is a lot cheaper than  sting operations. Also, it is good for PR and it does not alienate the Muslim community.

To address general support you are going to have to completely reverse your thinking (“you” referring to the United States). I really do not see a single policy which does not help al-Qa’idah as an idea. Maybe some of them are effective at stopping explosions in the United States, but even the non-lethal CT strategies tend to seem extremely ineffective to me.

In terms of the idea war America is just riding on the coattails of 9/11. Without 9/11 the Taliban would be in power, an Islamic state would exist in Somalia, Chechnya would be a much more conventional conflict, HAMAS would likely control all of Palestine, Ikhwan al-Muslimin would be running the favored candidate for the Egyptian presidency, and the LIFG would be the public face of the rebels in Libya. Are these all guarantees? No, but they are very easy to picture in world without 9/11.

9/11 essentially dealt a knockout punch to AQ as an idea, but it has gotten up and continued to grow since it was dealt that big blow. It took AQ a while after 9/11 to hit its bottom, but there is a certain indescribable point after Zarqawi’s death after which AQ as a concept has not suffered a single real setback. Despite this, I do not think AQ is damaged by future operational success. Its current image and America’s current image prevent this.

To create ideological deterrence the US needs to be much more creative and rethink its entire approach. This is a big part of what I am getting at with my first paragraph.

My wife:

I did meet my wife on al-Awlaki’s site. I used to send out e-mails on Islam to all of my contacts, and she had previously e-mailed me about a protest I was working to organize, so she was on my list. Later she asked me to show her best friend’s husband around DC, and it turned out that I had already met him by pure chance and we had exchanged numbers. This guy’s wife decided to try and set us up, so that eventually led to us getting married. In Islam (all Islam, not just jihadis) marriage is a much shorter process than in typical American society. It is much more like the system of courting which was predominant until the 1920s when dating came about.

The transition from online to real-world came only a couple of weeks before we were married. This is not uncommon among Muslims. Muslim “dating” sites are actually marriage sites. I even had a friend who ran one.

Forum:

If the forum was not just some CT experiment and it was an honest attempt at dialogue, then it would be almost certain to achieve things. If it is not truly honest, then it would almost certainly fail.

If you look for my posts on Islamic Awakening you will find a thread debating al-‘Awlaki. It was done by someone else in the CT field and I identified it as such essentially immediately. Maybe you do not have access to intel on the poster, but I am 100% sure it is some undercover individual. You are dealing with the most paranoid community in the world, so any efforts at deception are very likely to rapidly alienate your audience. The al-Mosul was abandoned very quickly over issues of trust. The more hardcore jihadis did not trust RM until I joined it (see my Ansar post).

Additionally, it would have to be limited to certain individuals. You would want to limit both sides to people of influence. Such people would carry progress back to those who listen to them. The forum could be completely private if it had to be.

I do not know who would join, but a lot of people would. Members of the Taliban have long expressed interest in dialogue. Members of other groups like LIFG, EIJ, and others would also likely be interested. From the West you would probably only have random success in getting people to join. However there are very few groups in the West which are organized, so random success is not really a problem. Of all the overseas organizations, the various branches of al-Qa’idah strike me as the least likely to participate.

You could even try to involve prisoners and detainees in the process. There are only a few people here whom I have doubts as to whether or not they would think of it as a good idea.

Regret:

I regret to say this is one area which I cannot comment on. Both a concrete “yes” and a concrete “no” stand to harm me due to my case’s current status. That might sound odd, but I cannot elaborate on it.

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Sincerely,

Zachary Adam Chesser
10/04/11

P.S. They do not let me use the paper you send for some strange reason.

 
 

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Zachary Adam Chesser: September 13, 2011 (Some Clarifications Regarding Questions from the Senate Intelligence Committee on Homeland Security)

بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم

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I sent you a write-up of what I had to say on the matters you inquired about. However, please understand that my case has certain things which are ongoing and this prevents me from being able to say certain things which might seem important of even beneficial for myself.

███████████████ our case manager, refused to give me the extra paper, so I am writing on what we have access to in here.

The name ibnu farxaan alkimaayawi seems to have come about after my arrest. Also, if you are unable to see things from the Ansar forum, then you are missing a huge part of the picture. Furthermore, prior to my arrest I made a website called Insurgent (or Insurgency) Blog at insurgentblog.wordpress.com. I only made two posts, but I received a complement from David Meek via twitter (I forget the username) and he is a wellknown person in that field of research. I also made a website with all of al-‘Awlaqi’s material on wordpress.

I am just now seeing the document you sent me for the first time, and I am shocked at the things my lawyers said. They had some theory that they could say I was just some guy with no influence and no connections trying to just march into Somalia. I told them this would not work, but now I know they did not listen.

At one point in time I was considering walking if I could not find a boat and if I could not get the World Food Program to allow me on one of their trips by plane.

I also never tried to force my girlfriend to marry me. I broke up with her because Islam does not allow paramours and we could not get married. I did not demand it. Rather, I think she initially brought it up, maybe even before I became Muslim.

I only ever bought one ticket to Uganda, not two. I bought two for Kenya, and secured a doctor’s permission for my wife to fly, but she went into a false kind of labor, so I stayed behind. At that point in time I had no clue you could be arrested for joining al-Shabaab, so I was technically not in violation of the law.

As for my statement of facts, there are many errors, some major and some minor. There are also some things which I have no clue regarding their veracity, so I am waiting on my lawyers to send me my discovery to find out about them. However, some things are classified and I am not allowed to see them to know if they are true or not. Actually, I was originally asked to sign a deal with three classified facts which I could not see.

Certain things I will not correct, because I do not have any interest in angering the prosecution, but maybe law enforcement can correct some of them now. However, I will say that taking my son had nothing to do with cover, and it was entirely to make my wife’s life easier. The camera which supposedly was to make HD videos for al-Shabaab was about as good as a phone camera, and it was really for making home videos of my son. It even had these videos on it when they arrested me. The prosecutor probably misunderstood one of my interviews with the FBI prior to my arrest.

I did mention my son being good for “cover” but this was to comfort my wife regarding me and her son being in Africa without her.

I do not have a copy of my statement of facts to correct, so that is all I am willing to say off the top of my head.

I do not recall using “Abu Talha” on Islamic Awakening. “Islamic Emirate” did not have any mention of Afghanistan when I was arrested. “AlShabaabNasheeds” or something like it was mine as well as a bunch which I have forgotten. The rest look like mine.

If I communicate with you after the report or in relation to things other than it do you have to disclose them?

Thank you,

Zakariyya Chesser

09/13/2011

 
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Posted by on September 13, 2011 in Letters from Zachary Adam Chesser, Risala

 

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Zachary Adam Chesser: 2011 (Why Jihad; Internet & Motivations)

بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم

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If Allah wills, I intend to answer you questions in detail. However, before I do, I will provide brief responses at the beginning of this correspondence for the sake of clarity.

What interested me in jihad?

My religion, the state of affairs in the Muslim world, and a desire to alleviate suffering within it led me to desire to fight jihad.

What interested me in the internet?

For my generation this is tantamount to asking the question, “What interested you in the phone?” It is simply the most dynamic and convenient form of media there is. If I had continued with Revolution Muslim, it would now be pulling in a larger audience than many television stations (here I am referring to the ones beyond basic cable). I was on the internet before I became Muslim, so there was no real decision to be made.

Did any real-world interactions play a role?

Yes, they played essentially the same role as the online ones.

What led me to post my own material?

It is a means to an end. Had I been a kid in Afghanistan, I would have chosen a different means. This is the theme of “Open Source Jihad.” Certain opportunities do not exist in the West, so people in the West have pursued others. These roles turned out to be more important than the other ones, so you now see Americans, Canadians and Europeans shaping the nature of the jihad movement. Essentially you have Hollywood meets al-Qa’idah, and the result is dramatic.

Have I had any insight into the “why” of my story?

Yes, basically I saw a nasty situation in the world and I turned to my religion for a solution. The one I believed to be most accurate was the one I followed.

Describe my interactions with law enforcement?

My first two interviews seemed to be aimed at convincing me to be an informant, as essentially no specifics were gleaned from either interview. I was briefly a neo-salafi during this time, and one can see that from my postings on Hizb ut-Tahrir on al-Awlaqi’s website and my early activity on my most well known Youtube channel. However, at some point around the time of these interviews law enforcement raided the house where I became Muslim, which angered me tremendously, destroyed my movement away from jihad, and caused me to refuse further contact.  Read the rest of this entry »

 
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Posted by on September 1, 2011 in Letters from Zachary Adam Chesser, Risala

 

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Omer Abdi Mohamed Faces 15 Years for Patriotism & Buying Plane Tickets…

Omer Abdi Mohamed, originally from Somalia, living in the US state of Minnesota has admitted to helping men of Somali origin travel to the African country to join the al-Shabab militant group. He admitted one count of: “conspiracy to murder, kidnap and maim others in a foreign country.” For helping other Somali youth purchase plane tickets to the besieged Horn of Africa nation.

The 26-year-old’s plea came on the eve of what would have been the first trial in a federal probe into the recruiting of US fighters for al-Shabab, and after almost 2 years in jail since his arrest in November of 2009. Mohamed faces up to 15 years in jail when sentenced later.His lawyer, Peter Wold, said his client chose to admit the charge of providing material support to terrorists because he has a family and faced a much longer sentence if convicted in court. Chief U.S. District Judge Michael Davis allowed Mohamed to remain free on electronic monitoring. Mohamed is the sixth man to plead guilty after the investigation, known to federal agents as “Operation Rhino” but the nature of plea bargains meant “evidence” from the previous cases had been kept mostly under wraps.

In a statement posted on the FBI’s website, the US Attorney’s office said Mohamed had admitted being a member of a conspiracy that recruited young men of Somali descent to travel to Somalia to defend their homeland against the invading Ethiopian troops. At least 21 are believed to have traveled from the US to Somalia. Read the rest of this entry »

 
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Posted by on July 20, 2011 in News Items

 

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Somalian National Abducted by U.S Navy

A U.S administration official admitted a Somali National was held abroad on a U.S. Navy ship for questioning for over two months without being advised of any legal rights. The man, identified as Ahmed Abdulkadir Warsame, was brought to New York City on July 4 to face charges in a U.S.criminal court. Warsame arrived in New York City late on July 4 after being ‘formally arrested’ the previous day, despite having spent more than two months in custody since he was abducted by the U.S Navy in April, according to a letter from prosecutors to the U.S. court.

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Abduction, Detention & Interrogation

Warsame was actually first ‘arrested’ in April by the U.S. military in the Gulf of Aden, when he was kidnapped in the Horn of Africa region by U.S. military personnel on April 19. He was questioned about anti-terrorism “for intelligence purposes for more than two months” before being informed of his Miranda rights, the prosecutors said in a statement. Miranda rights entitle suspects to a lawyer and the right to remain silent.

Warsame was questioned for intelligence purposes for over two months aboard a U.S. Navy ship. Senior administration officials said Tuesday night that he provided important intelligence on two State Department-designated terror groups—al-Qaida and its Somali ally, al-Shabaab, before being read his Miranda rights, waiving them and submitting for several days to questioning by FBI agents designed to elicit statements that could be used against him in his civilian trial.

Read the rest of this entry »

 
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Posted by on July 8, 2011 in News Items

 

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Abdulhakim Mujahid Muhammad: September 1, 2010 (I’m Al-Qaeda and Proud to Be!)

Bismillah HirRahman NirRaheem
(In the Name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful)

TO: K. Goetz

To answer your questions; those that are in regards to Yemen and my experience there and future attacks against America.

Like I said, I went to Yemen to learn, meaning more about Islam. Yemen is quoted from our beloved Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) as a place of “Faith and Wisdom.” And it is one of the few places left in the Islamic World where people are still actually Muslims. Their faith surpasses many so-called Muslim Countries. And also, during the spread of Islam, it was one of those places like Sham (Palestine, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan) that became Muslim without a fight. So these are the reasons why I wanted to go there first and foremost.

I said to teach, meaning as a source of income; I really didn’t like teaching English considering it’s the English and others that are the enemies to the Muslims, and I felt uncomfortable teaching the language of the enemy to my brothers and sisters. So it was secondary. I taught at an Institute called “The British Academy” and others as well in Aden and Sana’a. I met many friends and brothers while in Yemen. I learned Arabic pretty fast by means of interacting with people. As far as me not knowing anyone: I knew some people there who could show me around and help me get started. It wasn’t just like I got up and moved. I made sure I had some connections first.

Yes, I was married in Yemen to a Yemeni woman. Infact, I was still considered there as engaged as far as culture wise because the culture party wasn’t fulfilled yet. My wife’s family is from Abyan and this is a province close to Aden, a province which was bombed by American drones which resulted in civilian deaths numbering as high as 60. Men, women, children, elders were murdered by Ol’ Uncle Sam. And when the same people sent a brave Islamic Warrior from Nigeria, my brother Umar Farouk AbdulMuttalib, to avenge those deaths, here goes Ol’ Uncle Sam, scratching his head, asking himself “Why?” when he knows damn well why!  Read the rest of this entry »

 

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