You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Arabia
Qataris rally after suicide bombings
2005-03-22
Qataris in traditional flowing robes and foreigners in jeans and business suits rallied Monday in a state-organized show of indignation and unity against terrorism near the site of a suicide bombing that killed a British teacher and wounded 12 other people. Many demonstrators said they wanted everyone to know foreigners are welcome in the Persian Gulf state and terrorists are not. Banners at the demonstration read: "Western Expatriates We Love You. Your Security is Our Concern."

"We love all Westerners and we don't want this to happen again in our country," said Khalifa al-Tamimi, an employee of state-owned Qatar Petroleum. "Whoever did this is illiterate and uncivilized. Surely this is not the work of Qatari people."
He's right. It mightn't be a Qatari. Might've been a Soddy, or a Jordanian, or a Yemeni. But it prolly wasn't a Iraqi...they're too busy being sensible right now...
The explosion occurred outside the Doha Players Theater production of Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night." It killed Jonathan Adams, a British teacher who directed the show and was watching it with his family. Adams had heard a revving car and went outside to check when the explosion occurred, so he caught the full force of the blast, according to an Australian protester, Pauline Furlong, who said she knew Adams. A previously unknown militant group, Jund al-Sham, posted a statement on an Islamic Web site claiming it carried out the attack to start a campaign against those who "desecrate the soil of the land of Islam."
Allan (PTUI) be praised.
Authorities have blamed the attack on Omar Ahmed Abdullah Ali, an Egyptian computer programmer who seethed worked in Qatar for five years. In Cairo, relatives dressed in black arrived at the home of his family to offer condolences. "I do not believe he did it," Ali's mother, Kawthar el-Sayyed, said. "Whoever did the attack might have stolen his car or stolen his name." She said her son never spoke about holy war or suicide and she could not believe he would abandon his children. "He prays and fasts and explodes just like any regular Muslim," she said with tears in her eyes. El-Sayyed said she hoped her son's name had come up by mistake. She said four Egyptian police officers searched her apartment Sunday but did not take anything.

The Internet claim of responsibility, which could not be verified, called the attack a "historic" operation and criticized Arab leaders for allowing Western military bases and churches on their territories. The claim made no mention of the al-Qaida terror network, but denied any links with militants in the Palestinian territories or Lebanon. A small Islamic group of the same name emerged in a Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon last year.
Ansar al-Islam used the same alias when it started out. And there's another bunch in Pakistan that uses the same handle. I think it's a generic boom boy thing, until they hit the big time.
Posted by:Dan Darling

00:00