http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/boston-marathon-bombing-tamerlan-tsarnaev-was-a-boxer-dzhokhar-tsarnaev-was-a-wrestler-both-were-terrorists-8580934.html


Boston Marathon bombing: Tamerlan Tsarnaev was a boxer. Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was a 
wrestler. Both were terrorists 
The Tsarneav family fled war-torn Chechnya in pursuit of the American dream. So 
how did their sons turn out to be America’s nightmare?

Cahal Milmo  
Friday 19 April 2013 


Related articles
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rebels 

  b.. 13 killed in Russia 'insurgent' attacks 

  c.. From Boston to Chechnya to Moscow: the chain of terror that unites US and 
Russia 

  d.. Dagestan newspaper founder shot dead 

  e.. Youtube, Amazon and the Russian answer to Facebook all offer a glimpse 
into the minds of the Boston bombing suspects 

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On Thursday night Alvi Tsarni received an unexpected phone call from his 
nephew, Tamerlan Tsarnaev. The pair had not spoken for four years because of a 
family dispute but Tamerlan had a simple request of his uncle. He said: 
“Forgive me.”

As the pair spoke, images of the two rucksack-carrying prime suspects believed 
to have caused the carnage at the Boston Marathon were being beamed across 
America.

Within hours Tamerlan, 26, a talented amateur boxer, would lie mortally wounded 
in a Boston suburb after an apparent suicide dash into a hail of police 
bullets. His 19-year-old brother Dzhokhar, the other suspect, was the subject 
of a manhunt that paralysed the entire city.

The extraordinary drama which unfolded was the culminating chapter of lives 
that turned two young Muslims from the war-torn former Soviet fiefdom of 
Chechnya first into model US immigrants, but then into twisted bombers – who, 
according some reports, lingered after Monday's twin blasts to examine the 
results of their work.

The banditry that occurred in the Boston suburbs of Watertown and Cambridge 
must have seemed impossible on 16 May 2011 when the winners of a prized 
scholarship for graduating high-school students attended a formal civic 
reception to receive their $2,500 prize.

Among them was Dzhokhar, who was captured grinning proudly in a graduation 
photograph, sporting the same shock of unruly curly brown hair seen curling 
from under his white baseball cap in this week's CCTV images. A model pupil 
from the highly rated Cambridge Rindge and Latin School, he had been a popular 
classmate, acting in plays and featuring as an "all-star" in the school 
wrestling team.

The apparent reality that this handsome, carefree young man, whose father 
wrongly believed had embarked on studies to become a doctor, had along with his 
elder sibling become a calculating murderer was yesterday too hard for his 
family to take.

Speaking from Makhachkala, the capital of Dagestan, a Caucasus state 
neighbouring Chechnya, the men's father, Anzor, said: "My son is a true angel. 
Dzhokhar is a second-year medical student in the US. He is such an intelligent 
boy. We expected him to come on holidays here."

The car mechanic, who had originally lived with the family in a rented flat in 
Cambridge before travelling to Dagestan following treatment for a brain tumour, 
added: "They were set up. I saw it on television; they killed my older son 
Tamerlan."

Asked about the phone call from Tamerlan, Alvi Tsarni, who spoke in halting 
English at his home in the Boston area, said: "Yesterday he called me and said 
'forgive me, from now we will be together forever'. If he did this, I'm sorry. 
It's crazy. It's not possible. I can't believe it."

There was little evidence of radicalisation as the 19-year-old went about his 
life. On his page on VKontakte, a Russian-language version of Facebook, 
Dzhokhar listed "career and money" as his principal interests. He listed his 
favourite song as "Hey Sexy Lady" by Shaggy. But when asked for his world view, 
he answered "Islam" and had recently added to links to jihadist material on the 
website. Larry Aaronson, a former teacher at Rindge and Latin, told the Boston 
Globe: "If someone were to ask me what the kid was like, I would say he had a 
heart of gold. He was as gracious as possible." A former classmate described 
Dzhokhar as a "normal American kid".

If any seeds of murderous intent were apparent yesterday, they lay with 
Tamerlan rather than his younger brother. The stocky heavyweight had dropped 
out of an engineering course to concentrate on his boxing career.

Like his brother, Tamerlan was outwardly at ease with his American identity. In 
a photo essay by a local photographer in 2010, he can be seen posing outside 
the gym in front of his silver Mercedes, sporting sunglasses and white slip-on 
shoes. But he told the photographer: "I don't have a single American friend. I 
don't understand them."

He added that he was "very religious", eschewing alcohol and complaining that 
"there are no values any more". Such values did not prevent his arrest a year 
earlier on suspicion of beating up his then girlfriend.

Despite their Chechen roots, the amount of time they spent in the country seems 
to have been limited as the family of two boys and two girls, Bella and Amina, 
shifted around a succession of former Soviet states including Kyrgyzstan, 
Kazakhstan and Dagestan. It was from Dagestan that the family eventually 
travelled to Massachusetts with Dzhokhar arriving in 2002 and his brother 
following two years later.

The family were assisted by members of Boston's small Chechen community. But 
despite some academic success for the brothers, the family was clearly 
struggling. Financial help was sought from relatives while Anzor, a talented 
mechanic but unable to speak English, scratched a meagre income at $10 an hour. 
The mother of the two apparent bombers, Zubeidat, 45, was last year charged 
with stealing $1,600 (£1,000) of clothes.

Along with it seems to have come the slow slide into radicalisation for the two 
brothers which reached its horrific zenith on Monday as they mixed with the 
crowds enjoying the proudest day in Boston's sporting calendar.

It emerged that both brothers had become increasingly interested in Islam and 
returned for significant periods of time to Dagestan, perhaps crossing into 
Chechnya where rebel leaders have increasingly allied themselves with al-Qa'ida 
and militant Islamists.

Tamerlan appears to have flirted with criminality, listing a series of texts on 
how to forge identity documents on his Amazon wishlist.

For another uncle of the two men, the meaning of their actions was grimly 
clear. Ruslan Tsarni, who lives near Washington DC and is a director of a 
London-based oil services company, branded Tamerlan "a loser", adding: "I 
always told those two, Islam has always been there, just do your business. 
Work, go to school, be useful. Know why you came to America. I am not 
sympathising with them." He added: "I wish they never existed. They do no 
deserve to exist on this earth."

Tamerlan Tsarnaev

The 26-year-old had been a talented amateur boxer who said he hoped one day to 
compete for the United States at the Olympics. He died at a medical centre in a 
Boston suburb after being shot by police, and as a suspect in America's worst 
terrorist attack since 9/11

Dzhokhar Tsarnaev

Tamerlan's 19-year-old brother was named as the second suspect in the Boston 
bombing. Once hailed as a model student at the highly-rated Cambridge Rindge & 
Latin School, he became the subject of a manhunt which paralysed Boston. His 
father yesterday described him as "a true angel".


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