Hehehe... imam yg soleh dan bertaqwa ini lbh suka ngaku dia nipu cuma
demi duit ketimbang dia ngedukung jihad di jalan auloh yg dilakukan
Taliban.

Orang Islam itu emang tukang tipu, ga bisa dipercaya sama sekali
omongannya, makanya ga heran orang2 Islam di milis ini jg tukang tipu,
sampe2 anjing2 buduk piaraannya jg tukang tipu.


http://www.jihadwatch.org/2013/02/miami-imam-testifies-that-he-lied-about-supporting-the-taliban-just-to-get-money.html

Miami imam testifies that he lied about supporting the Taliban just to get money

This imam sounds like so many other Islamic supremacists do when
they're cornered: accuse the non-Muslim who is questioning them of
being insane (as Hussein Ibish did to me when I asked him how he could
be sure that the Palestinian state he advocates would not be used as a
base to launch new jihad attacks on Israel), lie outright in flagrant
contradiction to their earlier statements (as innumerable jihadis have
done when asked about their recorded pro-jihad statements), and refuse
to answer direct questions, instead launching into rambling
off-the-point tirades (as Mubin Shaikh did in debate with me last
night, as have numerous other Islamic supremacists I've debated).

Anyway, now Hafiz Khan has now admitted that he is a dedicated and
habitual liar. How can we tell that he isn't lying now?

"Miami imam testifies that he lied when he professed support for the
Taliban," by Jay Weaver for the Miami Herald, February 20 (thanks to
Darcy):

    In testimony that was at turns deadly serious and comical, a Miami
imam accused of aiding terrorists testified Wednesday that he lied
about his ostensible support for the Pakistani Taliban because he
wanted to obtain $1 million from a purported Taliban sympathizer — who
was actually an FBI informant.

    Hafiz Khan, 77, the one-time leader of a Miami mosque, said he
repeatedly deceived the informant, known as Mahmood Siddiqui, because
Siddiqui had promised him the money to help poor victims of war
between the Taliban and Pakistan army in the Swat Valley near the
Afghanistan border.

    Khan, accused of sending money to the U.S.-designated terrorist
organization, was unaware that his conversations — in which he wished
Americans would die in pursuit of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden —
were recorded by the FBI.

    “What I said was all lies,” Khan testified in Pashto through an
interpreter. “It was just because of the money.”

    Khan, on trial in federal court since early January, spent a
second day on the witness stand in his own defense on charges of
supplying at least $50,000 from 2008-2010 to the Taliban, sworn
enemies of the U.S. and Pakistan governments. Khan, charged with four
counts of providing material support to a terrorist organization, has
maintained that the money he sent from Miami to Pakistan was for his
family members, the poor and a religious school, or madrassa, in the
Swat Valley — not to arm the Taliban.

    “They are totally our enemies,” Khan testified about the Taliban,
despite his ardent statements of support in the FBI-recorded phone
conversations.

    Khan, a naturalized U.S. citizen who came to this country in 1994,
sparred during cross-examination with Assistant U.S. Attorney John
Shipley, who grew frustrated as the frail yet feisty imam dodged his
questions about his true beliefs about terrorism.

    At one point, Khan said: “I kindly suggest to you that you go to a
hospital. You have a mental problem.” He added that the
cross-examination was a waste of time.

    “I’ll let the jury make that determination, Mr. Khan,” the prosecutor said.

    The 12 jurors tried to stifle their laughter, at which point U.S.
District Judge Robert Scola excused them to take a break.

    Scola then advised the defendant to bring his testimony down a
notch. “You are never going to convince Mr. Shipley to change his mind
about you,” the judge told him. “The only chance you have is to
convince the jury to believe you.”

    Shipley peppered the defendant with questions about his recorded
conversations with the FBI informant, in which he praised the
attempted 2010 bombing in New York’s Times Square.

    “There are many times I am agreeing with him, but that does not
mean that I mean it,” Khan testified.

    Shipley, however, pointed out that Khan made similar comments in
other telephone conversations with friends and relatives that also
were intercepted by the FBI. The prosecutor repeatedly tried to compel
the defendant to admit that he believes it is justifiable to kill
Pakistani police and government officials because they have supposedly
committed killings and atrocities themselves.

    “What you are suggesting is exactly what the Taliban and al-Qaida
have suggested for years. And we heard it in this courtroom,” Shipley
said.

    Khan admitted he made those statements in the recorded
conversations, including saying to the FBI informant: “May God give
the government to the Taliban.” Khan said he was expressing moral
outrage over the Pakistan Army’s killing of women and children in the
Swat Valley during its war with the Taliban.

    At the same time, he seemed to suggest he endorsed an
eye-for-an-eye philosophy.

    “I did say this, yes. Now I will explain,” he told Shipley. “They
killed people by cannon. They were innocent people killed in their
homes. ... The entire public said they committed atrocities.”

    Khan frequently attacked Shipley’s questions, calling them
repetitive and refusing to answer them. The witness also gave rambling
speeches that evaded the prosecutor’s questions, especially toward the
end of the day when he spoke nonstop for almost 15 minutes....

Posted by Robert on February 21, 2013 9:11 AM | 11 Comments


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