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তারিক বিন জিয়াদ: ইউরোপ বিজয়ী প্রথম মুসলিম সেনাপতি
Monday, 14 June 2021
ইউরোপের দক্ষিণ-পশ্চিম কোণে অবস্থিত দেশ স্পেন, যে দেশের বেশিরভাগ(৬৮%) মানুষ রোমান ক্যাথলিক খ্রিস্টান ধর্মাবলম্বী। মুসলিম প্রায় নেই বললেই চলে। অথচ কজন জানে এ দেশটি একসময় মুসলিম সাম্রাজ্যের অন্তর্ভূক্ত ছিল!
এ দেশটিকে ঘিরে রয়েছে মুসলিমদের গৌরবের ইতিহাস! এ ইতিহাস দু’এক বছরের নয়, কয়েক শত বছরের ইতিহাস এটি। স্পেনে কয়েক’শ
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Detroit A federal judge Monday refused to release on bond an accused Islamic State soldier captured on a Syrian battlefield three years ago, saying there is a risk the Dearborn man could flee the state.
U.S. District Judge David Lawson said GPS tether technology is not strong enough to prevent Ibraheem Musaibli, 30, of Dearborn from fleeing Michigan while awaiting trial on terrorism charges that could send him to federal prison for up to 50 years. A motivated individual has within his or her capability the means to defeat the technology, Lawson said.
Musaibli s lawyers pursued bond, saying the high school dropout and father of four was not dangerous, not a flight risk and was suffering from being held in what essentially amounts to solitary confinement at the Livingston County Jail. Prosecutors insisted Musaibli is dangerous and pointed to recorded jail calls during which he threatened to kill his lawyers if released from confinement.
By ROBERT SNELL | The Detroit News | Published: May 10, 2021 DETROIT (Tribune News Service) A federal judge Monday refused to release on bond an accused Islamic State soldier captured on a Syrian battlefield three years ago, saying there is a risk the Dearborn man could flee the state. U.S. District Judge David Lawson said GPS tether technology is not strong enough to prevent Ibraheem Musaibli, 30, of Dearborn from fleeing Michigan while awaiting trial on terrorism charges that could send him to federal prison for up to 50 years. A motivated individual has within his or her capability the means to defeat the technology, Lawson said.
13:59 EDT, 23 February 2021
A terror suspect who was caught on video rapping about body armour and bullets and denied plotting a Jihadi sword attack told a court he wanted to become a TikTok star.
Sahayb Abu, 27, from Dagenham in Essex, went to the same school in Ilford, East London as Jessie J and had ambitions to become a parody drill rap star, he told the Old Bailey.
The court heard Sahayb, who called himself the Masked Menace, bought an 18inch gladiator-style sword, a combat vest, two balaclavas, fingerless gloves and a combat-style hat as he allegedly prepared his attack.
In conversations with an undercover officer, he talked of assassinating a rival imam and had also researched the US embassy, the Israeli embassy, the Indian embassy, the Russian embassy and the Saudi embassy in London.