Wednesday, October 7, 2020

This mass-murderer begs for your pity

Wanted and dangerous | The US Department of Justice
unsealed an arrest order and an extradition request in 2017
Poor Ahlam Tamimi. 

Her husband has been deported ["04-Oct-20: The Sbarro bomber's husband has been forced to leave Jordan: A snapshot of developments"] to Qatar from Jordan, the country which had afforded the couple refuge and freedom for the past eight years. 

Or as Tamimi wrote in her plea to Jordan's King Abdullah II: 
"Jordan has embraced me and was a safe haven for me and my husband Nizar Tamimi after we were released from the prisons of the Israeli occupation. We lived the most beautiful days of our lives among the Jordanians in Jordan for nearly eight years."
Now, in the wake of that deportation, Tamimi is angling for sympathy. She bemoans the fact that the deportation has resulted in "separating us from each other so that we are disunited and returned to the pain of separation again."

That's right. She'd like the public to pity her, the woman who has never ceased gloating about the eight children and seven men and women whom she slaughtered in 2001.
 
And here is that blood-thirsty monster, one of the FBI's Most Wanted Terrorists (there are 28 of them in total) turning on the self-pity full blast in an interview with Al Quds, the news site of Hamas-affiliated Quds News Network 
"With the deportation of Nizar from Jordan, memories of the engagement period that was in Israeli prisons came back to us. The pain of separation returned, the pain of distancing and suffering."
We can only guess what Jordan's puzzling deportation of Nizar Tamimi portends and hope that it means true justice is on the horizon. But for now, we can only take comfort in the fact that our precious Malki's murderer is apparently not happy.

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