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Atiyah Abd al-Rahman is thought [6] to be the "Atiyah" who wrote a commanding letter [7] to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in December 2005. The State Department announcement [citation needed] said that Abd Al Rahman: Was a Libyan in his late 30s. Was based in Iran, representing al-Qaeda to other Islamist terrorist groups. Was appointed to that role by ...
Ghanimat, Abd al-Rahman Ismail Abd al-Rahman: Surif near Hebron: 1972: November 13, 1997: 5 life sentences: Relocation 2 – Gaza / Abroad: Hamas member [43] convicted of firing a machine gun at cars near Beit Shemesh in 1996. Efrat and Yaron Ungar were killed in the attack and their infant son was injured. [43] Ghawadire, Mu'ammar Murshid ...
Attiya Al-Qahtani (born 1953), Saudi Arabian runner; Mullah Attiya al-Jamri (1899–1981), Bahraini khatib and poet; Shuhdi Atiya ash-Shafi (died 1960), Egyptian communist theoretician and activist; Atiyah Abd al-Rahman (1970–2011), Libyan purported to be a member of al-Qaeda and related militant groups
The University of Texas at Dallas (UTD or UT Dallas) is a public research university in Richardson, Texas, United States. It is the northernmost institution of the University of Texas System . It was initially founded in 1961 as a private research arm of Texas Instruments .
A University of Texas at Dallas student was found dead a week after he disappeared, according to officials. Andrew Zhou Li, 20, was last seen on the evening of Feb. 24 at his on-campus apartment ...
The U.S. and U.K. on Thursday imposed sanctions on four leaders of Yemen's Houthi rebel group who have supported the militant group's recent attacks on vessels in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden.
Rewards for Justice Program (RFJ) is United States Department of State's national security interagency program that offers reward for information leading to the location or an arrest of leaders of terrorist groups, financiers of terrorism, including any individual that abide in plotting attacks carried out by foreign terrorist organizations. [3]
The Benevolence International Foundation (BIF; Benevolence International Fund in Canada), was a purported nonprofit charitable trust based in Saudi Arabia.It was determined to be a front for terrorist group Al-Qaeda and was banned by the United Nations Security Council Committee 1267 [1] and the US Department of the Treasury in November 2002. [2]