Tumgik
#ahmad al qahtani
tingedorange · 28 days
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
https://www.instagram.com/p/C48HMy9I1Le/?igsh=MW0wZWwycGtsN2NjdQ==
10 notes · View notes
Text
The social media company formerly known as Twitter has been accused in a revised civil US lawsuit of helping Saudi Arabia commit grave human rights abuses against its users, including by disclosing confidential user data at the request of Saudi authorities at a much higher rate than it has for the US, UK or Canada.
The lawsuit was brought last May against X, as Twitter is now known, by Areej al-Sadhan, the sister of a Saudi aid worker who was forcibly disappeared and then later sentenced to 20 years in jail.
It centers on the events surrounding the infiltration of the California company by three Saudi agents, two of whom were posing as Twitter employees in 2014 and 2015, which ultimately led to the arrest of al-Sadhan’s brother, Abdulrahman, and the exposure of the identity of thousands of anonymous Twitter users, some of whom were later reportedly detained and tortured as part of the government’s crackdown on dissent.
Lawyers for Al-Sadhan updated their claim last week to include new allegations about how Twitter, under the leadership of then chief executive Jack Dorsey, willfully ignored or had knowledge of the Saudi government’s campaign to ferret out critics but – because of financial considerations and efforts to keep close ties to the Saudi government, a top investor in the company – provided assistance to the kingdom.
The new lawsuit details how X had originally been seen seen as a critical vehicle for democratic movements during the Arab spring, and therefore became a source of concern for the Saudi government as early as 2013.
The new legal filing comes days after Human Rights Watch condemned a Saudi court for sentencing a man to death based solely on his Twitter and YouTube activity, which it called an “escalation” of the government’s crackdown on freedom of expression.
The convicted man, Muhammad al-Ghamdi, 54, is the brother of a Saudi scholar and government critic living in exile in the UK. Saudi court records examined by HRW showed that al-Ghamdi was accused of having two accounts, which had a total of 10 followers combined. Both accounts had fewer than 1,000 tweets combined, and contained retweets of well-known critics of the government.
The Saudi crackdown can be traced back to December 2014, as Ahmad Abouammo – who was later convicted in the US for secretly acting as a Saudi agent and lying to the FBI – began accessing and sending confidential user data to Saudi Arabian officials. In the new lawsuit, it is claimed that he sent a message to Saud al-Qahtani, a close aide to Mohammed bin Salman, via the social media company’s messaging system, saying “proactively and reactively we will delete evil, my brother”. It was a reference, the lawsuit claims, to the identification and harming of perceived Saudi dissidents who were using the platform. Al-Qahtani was later accused by the US of being a mastermind behind the murder of the journalist Jamal Khashoggi in 2018.
“Twitter was either aware of this message – brazenly sent on its own platform – or was deliberately ignorant to it,” the revised lawsuit states.
Twitter, now X, does not respond to questions from the press.
The Guardian contacted the company lawyer in the case, Ben Berkowitz of Keker, Van Nest & Peters, but did not receive a response. The Guardian also contacted Dorsey’s new company, Block, Inc, to request a comment from the former Twitter chief executive, but did not receive a response.
After Abouammo resigned in May 2015, he continued to contact Twitter to field requests he was receiving from Bader al-Asaker, a senior aide of Mohammed bin Salman, for the identity of confidential users. He made clear to the company, the lawsuit alleges, that the requests were on behalf of his “old partners in the Saudi government”.
The lawsuit also alleges that Twitter had “ample notice” of security risks to internal personal data, and that there was a threat of insiders illegally accessing it, based on public reporting at the time.
Twitter “did not simply ignore all these red flags … it was aware of the malign campaign”, the lawsuit claims.
On 28 September 2015, Twitter received a complaint from a Saudi user that their accounts had been compromised. But, the lawsuit alleges, the company did not act to bar one of the Saudis who was later accused – Ali Hamad Alzabarah – from having access to confidential user data, even though he had accessed the user’s account previously.
Saudi Arabian authorities, the lawsuit alleges, would formally follow up with Twitter once it received confidential user data from its agents working inside the company, by filing so-called EDRs – or emergency disclosure requests – in order to obtain documentation that confirmed a user’s identity, which it would then use in court. Often those EDRs were approved on the same day.
In May 2015, when two Twitter users tweeted about the kingdom in a way that al-Asaker found objectionable, Albabarah accessed the users’ data within hours. EDRs about the users were then sent, and automatically approved by Twitter, the lawsuit alleges.
Between July and December 2015, Twitter granted the kingdom information requests “significantly more often” than most other countries at that time, including Canada, the UK, Australia and Spain, the lawsuit alleges.
On 5 November 2015, just days before Twitter was confronted by the FBI about its concerns about a Saudi infiltration of the company, it promoted Alzabarah – now a fugitive living in Saudi. In response, Alzabarah sent his Saudi government contact, al-Asaker, a note, conveying his “unimaginable happiness” for the promotion. The note, the lawsuit claims, is evidence that Alzabarah believed al-Asaker had “arranged” or “been influential” in connection to the promotion.
Once Twitter was made aware of the FBI’s concerns, it put Alzabarah on leave and confiscated his laptop, but not his phone, which he has used extensively to contact his Saudi state contacts. Twitter, the lawsuit alleges, “had every reason to expect that Alzabarah would immediately flee to Saudi Arabia, which is exactly what he did.”
The US attorney’s office in San Francisco, which handled the case, did not respond to The Guardian’s request for comment on the company’s handling of the matter.
Twitter would later notify users who had been exposed, telling them their data “may” have been targeted, but did not provide more specific information about the scale or certainty that the breach had, in fact, occurred.
By “failing to give this crucial information, Twitter put thousands of Twitter users at risk,” the lawsuit alleges, claiming that some may have had time to escape the kingdom had they understood the risk. Even once Twitter was aware of the breach, it continued to meet and strategize with Saudi Arabia as one of its vital partners in the region. Dorsey met with bin Salman about six months after the company was made aware of the issue by the FBI, and the two discussed how to “train and qualify Saudi cadres.”
“We believe in Areej’s case and we will zealously prosecute it – but what she wants most is for Saudi Arabia to simply release her brother and let him re-join his family in the United States,” said Jim Walden, a lawyer representing Al-Sadhan from Walden Macht & Haran. “Were that to happen, she and Abdulrahman would gratefully resume their lives and leave justice in God’s hand.”
32 notes · View notes
badrrr · 7 months
Text
Some of the names that had previously been mentioned here in this channel. The least we can do is to atleast mention the ones we know..
Our scholars from Bangladesh who are behind bars, among whom are:
Sheikh Jashim Uddin Rahmani
Sheikh Hārūn Izhar
Sheikh Ali Hassan Osama
Sheikh Mahmud Hasan Gunvi
Sheikh Abu Taha with his two assistants Amir Uddin Foyez and Abdul Muhit
Our Scholars, students of knowledge and preachers who have been imprisoned and tortured by Tawagheet Regimes, among whom are:
Shaykh Nāṣir alFahd
Shaykh Sulaymān Nasir al-Alwan
Shaykh Waleed As-Sinani
Shaykh Khalid Rashid
Shaykh Ali al-Khudayr
Shaykh al-Khalidi
Shaykh Saud al-Obaid al-Qahtani
Shaykh Ahmad al-Asir
Shaykh Faisal
Shaykh Benbrika
Shaykh Abu Baraa- As-Sayf
Shaykh Abu Umar
Abu Hamza al-Misri
Abu Hamza (ATP)
Abu Imran (Belgium)
Abu Ilyas (Holland)
Abu Abdurrahman (Denmark)
Our scholars who had been k***d in the way of Allah after imprisonment:
Shaykh Musa al-Qarni
Shaykh Faris az-Zahrani
Shaykh Hamad al-Humeidi
Shaykh Abdul Aziz al-Tiwayli
Others:
Afiya
Hayla al-Qusayr
Umm A 
Umm Abdul Qayoom 
Ukht M and her daughters S and R (UK)
Sabir Miah (UK)
Ali Hussain (UK)
Safiyya (UK)
Safiya Yassin (USA)
Our young Deutsch
sis & student of Shaykh AMJ
Muhammad Abu Bakr (Minshawary)
Ali Bhola
Abul wali AbuKhadir Muse (The Smiling Somali)
Iqbal Khan (India)
Abu Syahla
Muhammad
Abu Yousuf
Brother R
Abu I and Abu N
Ukht S & Ukht H from India
Umm Hud
Sister A
Sister B & siblings & their mother 
Umm Mariyah
Brothers Jahanzaib, Nabeel, Abdullah Basit
Sister S (Bangladesh)
Our dear brother Muhammad Azharuddin
Brother 'Talib Exposed'
Brother Abu Luqman (Anjem) 
Brother Khaled 
Abu Fazul
Abu Umar (Pakistan)
Iqbal
Ibn Tsar (Chechen)
Hadi Nabi
Abu Ibrahim 
Ari and Alan 
Last edited on 25 Sep 23
Shared
اللهم فك قيد اسرانا و اسرى المسلمين
41 notes · View notes
uma1ra · 8 months
Text
Trials – Tests – Afflictions
Tumblr media
Allaahumma ‘innee as’aluka fi’lal-khayraat wa tarkal-munkaraat wa hubbal-masaakeen wa an taghfara lee wa tarhamanee wa ithaa aradta fitnata qawmin fatawaffanee ghayra maftoon, wa as’aluka hubbaka wa hubba man yuhibbuka wa hubba ‘amalin yuqarribunee ilaa hubbik
O Allaah, I ask You to grant me the performance of good deeds, abandonment of bad ones, and love of the poor; and (I ask You) that You forgive me and have mercy upon me; and if You intend to try a people, cause me to die without being tested; and I ask You for Your love, and the love of those who love you, and the love of actions which draw me closer to Your love.
Ahmad 5/243, Al-Haakim 1/521 and At-Tirmidhi 5/369 (with similar wording); declared hasan by At-Tirmidhi who said, “I asked Muhammad bin Isma’il (Al-Bukhari) and he said, “This hadith is hasan sahih.” Additionally, at the end of the hadith, the Prophet صَلَّى اللّٰهُ عَلَيْهِ وَسَلَّم said, “Verily it is true so learn it and teach it.”“
Source: From the Book “Supplications & Treatment with Ruqyah” ,
Dr. Sa’eed bin Ali Al-Qahtani, Dar-us-Salam Publication
0 notes
drmaqazi · 2 years
Text
AUTHENTIC DU’A AND DHIKR #18
AUTHENTIC DU’A AND DHIKR #18
Allaahumma ‘innee as’aluka fi’lal-khayraati wa tarkal-munkaraati
اللَّهُمَّ إنِّي أَسألُكَ فِعْلَ الْخَيْرَاتِ، وَتَرْكَ الْمُنْكَرَاتِ، وَحُبَّ الْمَسَاكِينِ، وَأَنْ تَغْفِرَ لِي، وَتَرْحَمَنِي، وَإِذَا أَرَدْتَ فِتْنَةَ قَوْمٍ فَتَوَفَّنِي غَيْرَ مَفْتُونٍ، وَأَسْأَلُكَ حُبَّكَ، وَحُبَّ مَنْ يُحِبُّكَ، وَحُبَّ عَمَلٍ يُقَرِّبُنِي إِلَى حُبِّكَ
Allaahumma ‘innee as’aluka fi’lal-khayraati wa tarkal-munkaraati wa hubbal-masaakeeni wa an taghfira lee wa tarhamanee wa idhaa aradta fitnata qawmin fatawaffanee ghayra maftoonin, wa as’aluka hubbaka wa hubba man yuhibbuka wa hubba ‘amalin yuqarribunee ilaa hubbik
O. Allaah, I ask You to grant me the performance of good deeds, abandonment of bad ones, and love of the poor; and (I ask You) that You forgive me and have mercy upon me; and if You intend to try a people, cause me to die without being tested; and I ask You for Your love, and the love of those who love you, and the love of actions which draw me closer to Your love.
Ahmad 5/243, Al-Haakim 1/521 and At-Tirmidhi 5/369 (with similar wording); declared hasan by At-Tirmidhi who said, “I asked Muhammad bin Isma’il (Al-Bukhari) and he said, “This hadith is hasan sahih.” Additionally, at the end of the hadith, the Prophet صَلَّى اللّٰهُ عَلَيْهِ وَسَلَّم said, “Verily it is true so learn it and teach it.”“
Source: From the Book “Supplications & Treatment with Ruqyah” ,
Dr. Sa’eed bin Ali Al-Qahtani, Dar-us-Salam Publication
0 notes
harpianews · 2 years
Text
Suspected '9/11 hijacker' released from Guantanamo to Saudi Arabia
Suspected ‘9/11 hijacker’ released from Guantanamo to Saudi Arabia
A Saudi prisoner at the Guantanamo Bay detention center who was suspected of trying to join the 9/11 hijackers has been sent back to his home country for treatment for mental illness, the Department of Defense said. Mohammad Ahmad al-Qahtani was flown back to Saudi Arabia, to a treatment facility, from the US base in Cuba after a review board including military and intelligence officials…
View On WordPress
1 note · View note
justbeingnamaste · 2 years
Link
GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA- Figured it out yet, America? The Biden administration is not on your side.
From ignoring the supply chain crisis to now refusing to do anything to relieve Americans’ pain at the pumps by their refusal to go back to Trump-era oil exploration, this administration is doing everything they can to inflict as much pain on the American people as they are willing to take.
On Monday, in the ultimate middle-finger to the American people, the administration released the so-called “20th hijacker” from the September 11 attacks from Guantanamo Bay and sent him home to Saudi Arabia, the New York Post reports.
327 notes · View notes
deltamusings · 2 years
Link
Biden and his “administration” are publicly and openly siding with people who want the US weak, broke, and dead.  Pray.
2 notes · View notes
antoine-roquentin · 3 years
Link
Abdulrahman's detention, and now conviction, is believed to be linked to an anonymous Twitter account he ran, from which he commented on human rights and social justice issues in Saudi Arabia.
"It's not funny when a humanitarian worker, accused of satirising the Saudi government, is sentenced to 20 years in prison," Sarah Leah Whitson, executive director of DAWN human rights group told MEE.
"The real criminals are the Saudi authorities who arrested al-Sadhan three years ago and held him incommunicado for 23 months, because he allegedly criticised the repressive regime of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman."
The use of unnamed profiles on social media is a common practice in the kingdom, where free speech is heavily curtailed.
In 2015, Ali Alzabarah and Ahmad Abouammo, two former employees of Twitter, were accused of accessing and passing the details of more than 6,000 users critical of Riyadh to a Saudi official with close ties to the royal family.
Bloomberg reported in August that Sadhan's disappearance was a direct result of the actions of the alleged Twitter spies.
"To reach a point where they hack foreign companies, use spyware, bribe spies to leak information from a company based in a country that is an ally of Saudi Arabia, is really shocking," Abdulrahman's sister told MEE earlier this year.
Former royal court adviser Saud al-Qahtani used his verified Twitter account to boast in August 2017 that Riyadh had "technical ways" and a "secret I'm not going to say" to track down anonymous accounts.
"Does a pseudonym protect you from the blacklist?" Qahtani tweeted at the time. "No."
The former adviser's profile has since been permanently banned for violating Twitter's manipulation policies. He served as a close aide to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman until he was removed, after being implicated in Khashoggi's murder.
12 notes · View notes
creepingsharia · 4 years
Text
Two Muslim Twitter employees arrested, recruited by Saudis to spy on users
Ahmad Abouammo, a U.S. citizen, and Ali Alzabarah, a Saudi citizen, were charged with acting as agents of Saudi Arabia. Creep. Creep.
Tumblr media
SAN FRANCISCO — The Saudi government, frustrated by growing criticism of its leaders and policies on social media, recruited two Twitter employees to gather confidential personal information on thousands of accounts that included prominent opponents, prosecutors alleged Wednesday.
The complaint unsealed in U.S. District Court in San Francisco detailed a coordinated effort by Saudi government officials to recruit employees at the social media giant to look up the private data of Twitter accounts, including email addresses linked to the accounts and internet protocol addresses that can give up a user’s location.
The accounts included those of a popular critic of the government with more than 1 million followers and a news personality. Neither was named.
The complaint also alleged that the employees — whose jobs did not require access to Twitter users’ private information — were rewarded with a designer watch and tens of thousands of dollars funneled into secret bank accounts. Ahmad Abouammo, a U.S. citizen, and Ali Alzabarah, a Saudi citizen, were charged with acting as agents of Saudi Arabia without registering with the U.S. government.
The Saudi government had no immediate comment through its embassy in Washington. Its state-run media did not immediately acknowledge the charges.
The complaint marks the first time that the kingdom, long linked to the U.S. through its massive oil reserves and regional security arrangements, has been accused of spying in America.
The allegations against two former Twitter employees and a third man who ran a social media marketing company that did work for the Saudi royal family comes a little more than a year after the execution of Jamal Khashoggi. The Washington Post columnist and prominent critic of the Saudi government was slain and dismembered in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul.
Saudi Arabia under King Salman and his son, 34-year-old Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, have aggressively silenced and detained government critics even as it allows women to drive and opens movie theaters in the conservative kingdom.
Prince Mohammed also has been implicated by U.S. officials and a United Nations investigative report in the assassination of Khashoggi. The prince has said he bore ultimate responsibility for the kingdom, though he denies orchestrating the slaying.
The criminal allegations reveal the extent the Saudi government went to control the flow of information on Twitter, said Adam Coogle, a Middle East researcher with Human Rights Watch.
The crown prince’s former top adviser, Saud al-Qahtani, who also served as director of the cyber security federation, started the “Black List” hashtag to target critics of the government. He ominously tweeted in 2017 that the government had ways of unmasking anonymous Twitter users.
“Does a pseudonym protect you from #the_black_list? No,” al-Qahtani wrote, according to a report by Coogle released this week. “1) States have a method to learn the owner of the pseudonym 2) the IP address can be learned using a number of methods 3) a secret I will not say.”
“If you combine that with what we know about at least these two individuals and what went on in 2014 and into 2015, it’s pretty chilling,” Coogle said.
Al-Qahtani has been sanctioned for his suspected role in orchestrating the brutal killing of Khashoggi. His Twitter account was suspended in September for violating its platform manipulation policy.
Twitter acknowledged that it cooperated in the criminal investigation and said in a statement that it restricts access to sensitive account information “to a limited group of trained and vetted employees.”
“We understand the incredible risks faced by many who use Twitter to share their perspectives with the world and to hold those in power accountable,” the statement said. “We have tools in place to protect their privacy and their ability to do their vital work.”
A critic said Twitter didn’t live up to its principle of restricting access to information about private individuals to the smallest possible number of employees.
“If Twitter had implemented this principle, this misappropriation of information would not have been possible,” said Mike Chapple, who teaches cybersecurity at the University of Notre Dame’s Mendoza College of Business. “Social media companies must understand the sensitivity of this information and restrict access to the smallest possible number of employees. Failing to do so puts the privacy, and even the physical safety, of social media users at risk.”
Abouammo was also charged with falsifying documents and making false statements to obstruct FBI investigators — offenses that carry a maximum penalty of 30 years in prison if convicted.
At his appearance in Seattle federal court Wednesday, Abouammo was ordered to remain in custody pending a detention hearing set for Friday.
His lawyer, Christopher Black, declined to comment, as did Abouammo’s wife, who did not give her name.
The complaint said Abouammo, a media partnership manager for Twitter’s Middle East region, and Alzabarah, a site reliability engineer at Twitter, worked with an unnamed Saudi official who leads a charitable organization belonging to a person named Royal Family Member 1.
Prosecutors said a third defendant, a Saudi named Ahmed Almutairi who worked as a social media adviser for the Saudi royal family, acted as an intermediary with the Twitter employees.
The complaint said Almutairi recruited Alzabarah and flew him to Washington, D.C., in the spring of 2015, when a Saudi delegation visited the White House.
“Within one week of returning to San Francisco, Alzabarah began to access without authorization private data of Twitter users en masse,” the complaint said.
The effort included the user data of over 6,000 Twitter users, including at least 33 usernames for which Saudi Arabian law enforcement had submitted emergency disclosure requests to Twitter, investigators said.
After being confronted by his supervisors at Twitter, Alzabarah acknowledged accessing user data and said he did it out of curiosity, authorities said.
Alzabarah was placed on administrative leave, his work-owned laptop was seized, and he was escorted out of the office. The next day, he flew to Saudi Arabia with his wife and daughter and has not returned to the United States, investigators said.
A warrant for his and Almutairi’s arrests were issued as part of the complaint.
12 notes · View notes
salafiway · 5 years
Text
SALAFI MASHAYKH
This is a list of SOME (NOT ALL) Salafi scholars and (senior) students of knowledge of this era (a few are dead but the majority are alive today) who resided in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Egypt, Yemen, U.A.E., Algeria, Iraq and Jordan.
A handful of the scholars on this list have been refuted by other scholars on the list on particular issues but nothing that takes them out of Salafiyyah to the best of my knowledge.
PLEASE DO NOT MESSAGE ME OR SEND ME ANY REFUTATIONS ETC TO DISSCUSS, AGRUE OR DEBATE WITH ME OVER ANY OF THE MASHAYKH ON THIS LIST BECAUSE YOU HOLD THEY ARE NOT SALAFI.
List Of Contemporary Mashaykh (Divided In To Places Of Residence Of These Mashaykh Not Places Of Birth)
Saudi Arabia
Shaykh Abdul-Azeez Aal Shaykh
Shaykh Abi Abdillah Mahir Bin Dhafer Al-Qahtani
Shaykh Alee Ridaa
Shaykh Abdul-Kareem Al-Khudair
Shaykh Mustafa Mubram
Shaykh Saalih Aal-Taalib
Shaykh Khaalid Al-Ghaamadi
Shaykh Ali Abdur-Rehmaan Al-Huthayfi
Shaykh Salaah Al-Budayr
Shaykh S’ad Naasir Ash-Shithri
Shaykh Saalih Al-Luhaydaan
Shaykh Abdul-‘Azeez Ar-Raajihi
Shaykh Abdur-Rehmaan Al-‘Ajlaan
Shaykh Abdul-Muhsin Al-Abbad
Shaykh Rabee Ibn Haadi Al-Madkhali
Shaykh Saalih Al-Ubood
Shaykh Abdullaah Al-Jarboo
Shaykh Mis’ad Al-Husayni
Shaykh Saalih As-Sindi
Shaykh Ali At-Tuwayjari
Shaykh Ibrahim Ar-Ruhayli
Shaykh Khalid Ar-Raddadi
Shaykh Sulaymaan Ar-Ruhayli
Shaykh Muhammed Al-Hujayli
Shaykh Abdullah Al-Bukhari
Shaykh Saalih As-Suhaymi
Shaykh Wasi-Ullaah Al-‘Abbas
Shaykh Abdur-Rehmaan As-Sudays
Shaykh Ghurmullaah Zahrani
Shaykh Uthmaan Mu’Allaam
Shaykh Muhammed Umar Bazmool
Shaykh Aadel As-Subayee
Shaykh Abdullaah Al-Musallam
Shaykh Fahad Al-Fuhayd
Shaykh Saalih As-Sadlaan
Shaykh Ahmed Al-Munayee
Shaykh Abdul-‘Azeez As-Saeed
Shaykh Muhammed Aadam
Shaykh Salaah Al-Budayr
Shaykh Abdul- Azeez Al-Faalih
Shaykh Salaah Muhammed Aal Shaykh
Shaykh Ahmed Bazmool
Shaykh Abdul Majeed As-Subayyal
Shaykh Muhammed Al-Munayee
Shaykh Abdul Azeez Rayyis
Shaykh Abdullah Al-Ghunaymaan
Shaykh Alee Naasir al-Faqeehee
Shaykh Dr ‘Abdul-‘Aziz al-Sadhan
Shaykh Dr Khalid al-Mushayqih
Shaykh Muhammad al Maliki
Shaykh Muhammad bin ‘Abdul-Wahhaab Al-’Aqeel
Shaykh Saalih Ibn Saalih al-Fawzaan
Shaykh Ubayd Ibn ‘Abdullaah al-Jaabiree
Shaykh ‘Uthmaan Ibn Yahya al-Hamali
Shaykh Abdul-Muhsin Al-Ubaykan
Shaykh Ubaylaan
Shaykh Abdullah Ibn Sulfeeq adh-Dhafiri
Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Haadee al-Madkhalee
Shaykh Fu’ad Ibn Sa’ud al-‘Amri
Shaykh Prof. Asim al-Qaryuti
Shaykh Dr. Adil Muhammad Subay’ee
Shaykh Haythem Sarhaan
Shaykh Abdul Qaadir Ibn Muhammad al-Junaid
Shaykh ‘Adil Mansoor
Shaykh Fawaaz al-Madkhalee
Shaykh Hani Bareek
Shaykh Muhammad Sagheer ‘Akoor al-Madkhalee
Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Ramzaan al-Haajiree
Shaykh Badr Ibn Muhammad al-Badr al-‘Anazy
Shaykh Yahya at-Taaliby
Shaykh ‘Arafat Muhammady
Shaykh Muhammad ‘Awaji al-Muhjari al Madkhalee
Shaykh Hasan Daghriry
Shaykh Usamah Ibn Sa’ud al-‘Amri
Shaykh ‘Abdul’Azeez Ibn Moosaa Ibn Sayr al-Mubaaraky
Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Rabee’ Ibn Haadee al-Madkhalee
Shaykh ‘Awaad Sabty al-‘Anazy
Shaykh Abu ‘Umar Usamah al-‘Utaybi
Shaykh Khalid Namazy
Shaykh Ahmad ‘Aloosh al-Madkhalee
Shaykh ‘Uthmaan al-Mu’alim Somali
Shaykh Saalim Baamihriz Yemeni
Shaykh Doctor ‘Abdur Razzaaq Ibn ‘Abdul Muhsin al-‘Badr
Shaykh Abdul Malik ar-Ramadani
Shaykh Nasir Alaql
Shaykh Saeed Bin Ali Bin Wahf Al-Qahtani
Shaykh Abdur Rahman Muhay Deen
Yemen
Shaykh Abdullah Ibn Naajee al-Hadaad
Shaykh Rashaad al-Hubaishi
Shaykh Abu Amr’ Abdul Kareem Ibn Ahmed Al Hajooree
Shaykh ‘Ali Ibn Naasir Al ‘Adani
Shaykh Abdul-Ghani al-Umaree
Shaykh AbdulHameed al-Hajooree
Shaykh Abu Abdis Salaam Hasan Qaasim Ar Raymee
Shaykh Fath Al-Qadsi
Shaykh Khalid Abdul Rahman Al-Misree
Shaykh Muhammad al-Hakami
Shaykh Muhammad Bin Hizam
Shaykh Abu Abdur Rahman Abdullah Airyaani
Shaykh Salaah Kentush
Shaykh Abu Razzaq Al Nehmee
Shaykh Abdul Rakeeb Al Kawkabanee
Shaykh Muhammad Al Imam
Shaykh Muhammad Ibn ‘Abdul-Wahhaab al-Wassaabee
Shaykh ‘Ali Ibn Ahmad ar-Razihi
Shaykh ‘Abdul ‘Azeez Ibn Yahya al-Bura’ee
Shaykh ‘AbdulGhafoor al‑Lahaji
Shaykh ‘Abdur Rahmaan al-‘Adani
Shaykh Abu ‘Abdullah ‘Uthmaan Ibn ‘Abdullah as-Saalimee
Shaykh Abu Ammaar ‘Ali al-Hudayfee
Shaykh Abu Abdullah Uthmaan Ibn ‘Abdullah as-Saalimee
Shaykh, ‘Ali al-Qaleesee
Shaykh Ahmad Ibn Ahmad Shamlaan
Shaykh Saalim Baamihriz
Shaykh Yahyaa al-Jaabiree
Shaykh ‘Ali Ibn Ahmad ar-Razihi
Shaykh Abu Yahya Zakariyyah al-‘Adani
Shaykh ‘Abdur Rahmaan al-‘Adani
Shaykh Nu’maan al-Watr
Shaykh ‘Abdul Wasee’ as-Sa’eedi
Kuwait
Shaykh Ahmed al-Subai
Shaykh Abdullah Shreikah
Shaykh Faisal al Jaasim
Shaykh Falaah Ismaa’eel al-Mundikaar
Shaykh Falah al-Thani
Shaykh Hai Al Hai
Shaykh Hamd Al Uthman
Shaykh Hamdi Abdul Majeed
Shaykh Hamoud al-Najdi
Shaykh Mohammed al-Anjaree
Shaykh Saalim Taweel
Egypt
Shaykh Muhammad Abdul Wahhaab Al-Banna
Shaykh Khalid Abdul Rahman Al-Misree
Shaykh Khalid Bin Uthmaan
Shaykh Adil As’Sayyid
Shaykh Aadl Shoorbojee
Shaykh Talaat
Shaykh Raslaan
Shaykh Hasan ibn ‘Abdul Wahhab al-Banna
Shaykh Ali al-Waseefi
Shaykh Taamir Fatooh
Jordan
Shaykh Abu Islam
Shaykh Mohammed Musa Nasr
Shaykh Husain al-A’waiyashah
Shaykh Aba al-Hasan ‘Ali Ibn Mukhtar ar-Ramly
Shaykh Mashoor Hasan
Shaykh Sa’ad al-Husayn
U.A.E.
Shaykh Haamid Ibn Khamees al-Junaybi
Shaykh Ahmad Ibn Mubarak al-Mazroo’i
Iraq
Shaykh Mowafaq Hussein al-Jaboory
Shaykh Abu ‘Abdul Haqq ‘Abdul Lateef al-Kurdi
Algeria
Shaykh Azhar Sniqra
Shaykh Muhammad Ferkous
Shaykh Yusuf Al-Jazaa’iree
(A Few Mashaykh Who Died In This Era)
Shaykh Muqbil
Shaykh Uthaymeen
Shaykh Bin Baz
Shaykh Albaani
Shaykh Shaykh Abdus-Salam Bin Burjis
Shaykh Dr Saleh Al-Saleh
Shaykh Muhammad Ibn ‘Abdullaah As-Subayyal
Shaykh Zayd Ibn Haadee al-Madkhalee
Shaykh Abdullah An-Najmee
Shaykh ‘Abdur-Razzaaq Ibn ‘Afeefee
Shaykh Bakar ‘Abdullaah Abu Zayd
Shaykh Abdullaah al-Ghudayyaan
Inshallah this list will get updated from time to time.
13 notes · View notes
tasksweekly · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
[TASK 140: BAHRAIN]
In celebration of Arab American Heritage Month, here’s a masterlist below compiled of over 420+ Bahraini faceclaims categorised by gender with their occupation and ethnicity denoted if there was a reliable source. If you want an extra challenge use random.org to pick a random number! Of course everything listed below are just suggestions and you can pick whichever faceclaim or whichever project you desire.
Any questions can be sent here and all tutorials have been linked below the cut for ease of access! REMEMBER to tag your resources with #TASKSWEEKLY and we will reblog them onto the main! This task can be tagged with whatever you want but if you want us to see it please be sure that our tag is the first five tags, @ mention us or send us a messaging linking us to your post!
THE TASK - scroll down for FC’s!
STEP 1: Decide on a FC you wish to create resources for! You can always do more than one but who are you starting with? There are links to masterlists you can use in order to find them and if you want help, just send us a message and we can pick one for you at random!
STEP 2: Pick what you want to create! You can obviously do more than one thing, but what do you want to start off with? Screencaps, RP icons, GIF packs, masterlists, PNG’s, fancasts, alternative FC’s - LITERALLY anything you desire!
STEP 3: Look back on tasks that we have created previously for tutorials on the thing you are creating unless you have whatever it is you are doing mastered - then of course feel free to just get on and do it. :)
STEP 4: Upload and tag with #TASKSWEEKLY! If you didn’t use your own screencaps/images make sure to credit where you got them from as we will not reblog packs which do not credit caps or original gifs from the original maker.
THINGS YOU CAN MAKE FOR THIS TASK -  examples are linked!
Stumped for ideas? Maybe make a masterlist or graphic of your favourite faceclaims. A masterlist of names. Plot ideas or screencaps from a music video preformed by an artist. Masterlist of quotes and lyrics that can be used for starters, thread titles or tags. Guides on culture and customs.
Screencaps
RP icons [of all sizes]
Gif Pack [maybe gif icons if you wish]
PNG packs
Manips
Dash Icons
Character Aesthetics
PSD’s
XCF’s
Graphic Templates - can be chara header, promo, border or background PSD’s!
FC Masterlists - underused, with resources, without resources!
FC Help - could be related, family templates, alternatives.
Written Guides.
and whatever else you can think of / make!
MASTERLIST!
F:
Zakia El Ghanjy (1943) Bahraini - actress.
Amina Al Qafaas (1954) Bahraini - actress.
Fatima Ismail (1955) Bahraini - actress.
Latifa Al Megren (1956) Bahraini - actress.
Ahlaam Muhammed (1957) Bahraini - actress.
Maryam Zeman (1957) Bahraini - actress.
Shafeqa Youssef (1958) Bahraini - actress.
Souad Ali (1961) Bahraini - actress.
Samira Abed (1967) Bahraini - actress.
Ahlam / Ahlam Ali Al Shamsi (1968) Bahraini / Emirati - singer.
Zahra Arafat (1969) Bahraini - actress.
Noura Al Balushi (1969) Bahraini - actress.
Roaya Saleh (1969) Bahraini - chef and instagrammer (roayasalehxoxo).
Houria Arafat / Hourya Arafat (1972) Bahraini - actress.
Farah Ali (1972) Bahraini - actress.
Fadila El-Mobasher (1973) Bahraini - actress.
Zainab Al Askari (1974) Bahraini - actress, model, and spokesmodel.
Sumaya El Khenna (1974) Bahraini - actress.
Dina El Khengy (1974) Bahraini - actress.
Fatima Abdul Raheem (1975) Bahraini - actress.
Fay Al Sharqawi (1975) Bahraini - actress.
Shaima Sabt (1977) Bahraini / Indian - actress.
Sian Townson (1977) Bahraini, Welsh, English - filmmaker.
Ghada Al Faihani (1978) Bahraini - actress.
Haifa Hussein (1979) Bahraini - actress and singer.
Zohour Hussein (1979) Bahraini - actress.
Hind / Hend / Suhair (1979) Bahraini - singer-songwriter.
Ebtesam El Atwai (1980) Bahraini - actress.
Wijdan (1980) Bahraini - actress.
Shatha Sabt (1981) Bahraini / Indian - actress.
Amira Mohammed / Amira Mohammed Abdullah (1981) Bahraini - actress.
Wafaa Mekky (1981) Bahraini - actress.
Azhar Elhalwagy (1981) Bahraini - actress.
Al-Mohra (1981) Bahraini - actress.
Aamna Sharif (1982) Bahraini, Persian / Marathi Indian - actress and fashion designer.
Shaikha Albader (1982) Bahraini - actress.
Hessa Al Khalifa (1982) Bahraini / Emirati - instagrammer (hk_alkhalifa).
Sheikha Zowayed (1982) Bahraini - actress.
Yazz Ahmed (1983) Bahraini / British - trumpeter and flugelhorn player.
Mariam Bukamal (1984) Bahraini - tv personality, radio personality, sports commentator, and anchor.
Mashael (1984) Bahraini, Saudi Arabian, Lebanese - singer.
Sabrin Burshaid (1985) Bahraini - actress and tv host.
Ameera Al-Kooheji (1985) Bahraini - tv personality, director, and producer.
May El Calamawy (1986) Bahraini - actress.
Salwa Aljarrash / Salwa Al Jarrash (1986) Bahraini / Saudi Arabian - actress.
Reem Arhama (1986) Bahraini - actress.
Esra'a Al Shafei (1986) Bahraini - blogger.
Shaila Sabt (1989) Bahraini / Indian - actress, model, and Miss Middle East 2013.
Shaima Janahi (1989) Bahraini - actress.
Haya Ahmed (1990) Bahraini - singer and instagrammer (hayaahmed_official).
Fatima Aymen (1990) Bahraini - makeup artist and instagrammer (fatimamakeup).
Hanan Redha (1991) Bahraini - singer.
Samar El Zaaky (1991) Bahraini - actress.
Abrar Sabt (1992) Bahraini / Indian - actress.
Dana Al Salem (1992) Bahraini - actress.
Maria Christina Fernandes (1994) Bahraini / Ugandan, Portuguese - actress, singer, and dancer.
Zainab Mohd / Zainab Mohammad (1995) Bahraini - actress and model.
Eman Sebt (1995) Bahraini - actress.
Rania Abdulla (1996) Bahraini / Lebanese - instagrammer (raniaabdulla9).
Eman Alhussaini (1998) Bahraini - actress.
Fajr El Majed (1998) Bahraini - actress.
Hala Al Turk (2002) Bahraini, Jordanian / Syrian - actress and singer.
Sarah El Bloshy (?) Bahraini - actress.
Jona (?) Bahraini - actress and model (instagram: jona.bh).
Samawa Al-Shaikh (?) Bahraini - actress and singer.
Aya Hamdan (?) Bahraini, Jordanian, Palestinian, Unspecified White - filmmaker.
Sana Saleh (?) Bahraini - actress.
Muneera Muhammad (?) Bahraini - actress.
Lamia (?) Bahraini - actress.
Rita Qassem (?) Bahraini - actress.
Fatma Al-Dosry (?) Bahraini - actress.
Sameera Salman (?) Bahraini - actress.
Eissa Al Khanna (?) Bahraini - actress.
Hania Sulaiman (?) Bahraini - actress.
Faiza Jameel (?) Bahraini - actress.
Rana El Shuwikh (?) Bahraini - actress.
Fatma Zakry (?) Bahraini - actress.
Louloua Saleh (?) Bahraini - actress.
Jasmine Nasr (?) Bahraini - actress.
Zeinat Mahdy (?) Bahraini - actress.
Lamia Al-Shuwaikh (?) Bahraini - actress.
Farah Abdallah (?) Bahraini - actress.
Samah Atteya (?) Bahraini - actress.
Nouf Bahr (?) Bahraini - actress.
Zeinab Kelwan (?) Bahraini - actress.
Fatheya Abdallah (?) Bahraini - actress.
Mariam Youssef Al Kuhji (?) Bahraini - actress.
Fathiya Ajllan (?) Bahraini - musician.
Nahid Al-Shaykh (?) Bahraini - actress.
Amina Salman (?) Bahraini - actress.
Eman Hassan (?) Bahraini - actress.
Mona Hakeem (?) Bahraini - actress.
Nadia Mohammed (?) Bahraini - actress.
Nadia Youssef (?) Bahraini - actress.
Fatima Aziz (?) Bahraini - model (instagram: fatima.aziz36).
Adeela Khan (?) Bahraini - model (instagram: adeela_khan9).
Ayisha Adel (?) Bahraini - model (Instagram: ayishadel).
Aldana (?) Bahraini - model (instagram: aldana__bh).
Fatema Alseni (?) Bahraini - model (instagram: fatema_alseni1).
Um Zayan (?) Bahraini - model (instagram: qadisa_z).
Eliazy Alkhowely (?) Bahraini - model (instagram: eliazy_).
Crisxy (?) Bahraini - model (instagram: __crisxy__).
F - Athletes:
Ruqaya Al-Ghasra (1982) Bahraini - sprinter.
Mariam Mohamed Hadi Al Hilli (1984) Bahraini - sprinter.
Azza Al-Qasmi (1985) Bahraini - sports shooter.
Fatema Hameed Gerashi (1987 or 1988) Bahraini - swimmer.
Sameera Al-Bitar / Samira Al Bitar (1990) Bahraini - swimmer.
Rehana Sunder (1990) Bahraini - badminton player.
Sara Al-Flaij / Sarah Alfalaij (1995) Bahraini - swimmer.
Fatema Almahmeed (1999) Bahraini - swimmer.
M:
Ahmad Jumairi (1947) Bahraini - musician.
Ali Al Shargawi (1948) Bahraini - lyricist and playwright.
Mohammed Yasin (1949) Bahraini - actor.
Ibrahim El-Panki (1949) Bahraini - actor.
Qahtan El Qahtany (1954) Bahraini - actor.
Abdallah Malek (1957) Bahraini - actor.
Ahmed Eissa (1957) Bahraini - actor.
Khaled El Sheikh / Khalid Al-Shaikh (1958) Bahraini - singer-songwriter and composer.
Anwar Ahmed (1959) Bahraini - actor.
Bassam Al-Thawadi (1960) Bahraini - filmmaker.
Hameed Karimi (1960) Bahraini - actor.
Mostafa Rashid (1968) Bahraini - actor and director.
Khaled El Rowaie (1968) Bahraini - actor.
Rashed Al-Majed (1969) Bahraini / Saudi Arabian - singer-songwriter and producer.
Jamaan El Rowiei (1969) Bahraini - actor.
Taher Mohsin (1970) Bahraini - actor.
Ali El Ghreer (1972) Bahraini - actor.
Gamal El Ghilan (1973) Bahraini - actor.
Hussain AlRiffaei (1973) Bahraini - actor, director, and producer.
Nizar Abdulla / Nizar Abdullah (1973) Bahraini - actor.
Mansour El Gedawy (1974) Bahraini - actor.
Mohammed Haddad (1975) Bahraini - keyboardist, pianist, oud player, and composer.
Ahmed Al Hermi (1975) Bahraini - singer.
Khalid Mandi (1975) Bahraini - musician.
Mohammed Sharafi (1976) Bahraini - actor.
Khalil Al-Rumaithi / Khalil El Romethi (1979) Bahraini - actor.
Rudy Jahchan (1979) Bahraini - internet personality and producer.
Amir Dasmal (1980) Bahraini - actor.
Ala Ghawas (1981) Bahraini - singer-songwriter, guitarist, keyboardist, pianist, accordionist, and producer.
Fahad Mandi (1981) Bahraini - actor.
Hassan Mohamed (1982) Bahraini - actor.
Ayad Al Adhamy (1985) Bahraini - singer, guitarist, bassist, keyboardist, percussionist, remixer, and producer.
Niflick (1985) Bahraini - youtuber (Niflick).
Alee Alamm (1987) Bahraini - model and tv personality.
Hamad Al Fardan (1987) Bahraini - rapper and race driver.
Khaled El-Shaer (1987) Bahraini - actor.
Yonis Attiya (1987) Bahraini - filmmaker.
Zeyad Khalifa Zaiman (1987) Bahraini - actor.
Mohammed Turaif (1988) Bahraini - actor.
Bovlix (1988) Bahraini - dancer, artist, and instagrammer (bovlix).
Hamad A. Ali (1988) Bahraini - actor and filmmaker.
Hasan Abdulla (1989) Bahraini - filmmaker.
Majid Al Maskati (1990) Bahraini - singer.
Hisham Janahy (1991) Bahraini - actor.
Ahmed Sharif (1992) Bahraini - comedian and instagrammer (a.sharif92).
Ibrahim El Beraoy (1992) Bahraini - actor.
Abdulla Aldarzi (1992) Bahraini - actor.
Mohamed Zainal (1993) Bahraini - actor.
AK (1993) Bahraini - instagrammer (kmbs_almajed).
Omar Farooq (1994) Bahraini - youtuber (عمر فاروق Omar Farooq).
Bassam Sabt (1997) Bahraini / Indian - actor.
Khalid Laith (?) Bahraini - actor.
Essam Kamal (?) Bahraini - singer.
Ali Esbai (?) Bahraini - actor, comedian, director, and writer.
Sami Rashdan (?) Bahraini - actor.
Hussain Faisal (?) Bahraini - musician.
Kamal Rasool (?) Bahraini - singer (Flamingods).
Mohamed Buali (?) Bahraini - filmmaker.
Sawsan El Bosta (?) Bahraini - actor.
Waddah Swar (?) Bahraini - actor, comedian, and writer.
Adel Shams (?) Bahraini - actor.
Douglas Tilley (?) Bahraini / Unspecified White - actor and producer.
Badr Hassan (?) Bahraini - singer.
Ahmed Yacoub Al-Muqla / Ahmed Yacoub Al Moqla (?) Bahraini - director.
Saad Al Bouanin (?) Bahraini - actor.
Ahmed Alsaeg (?) Bahraini - actor and director.
Mohamed Al Qafas (?) Bahraini - filmmaker.
Abdallah El Saadwe (?) Bahraini - actor.
Thekryat Mosa (?) Bahraini - actor.
Jassim Al-Sayegh (?) Bahraini - actor.
Ali Adel / Ali Adel Hasan (?) Bahraini - filmmaker.
Peter Fernandes (?) Bahraini / Ugandan, Portuguese - actor and singer.
Aly Al.Aly (?) Bahraini - actor.
Hussein El Haliby (?) Bahraini - actor and director.
Ahmad Salahuddin (?) Bahraini - tv personality.
Mohammed Awad (?) Bahraini - actor.
Mohannad Mahdy (?) Bahraini - actor.
Ali Shaheen (?) Bahraini - actor.
Youssef AbdelKareem (?) Bahraini - actor.
Mamdouh Hassan (?) Bahraini - actor.
AbdelAzizi Saleh Dawood (?) Bahraini - actor.
Moudy Fahd (?) Bahraini - actor.
Faisal Alboori (?) Bahraini - actor.
Eissa Jassem (?) Bahraini - actor.
Hussein Othman (?) Bahraini - actor.
Sami Al Quoz (?) Bahraini - actor.
Mohammed Aljowder (?) Bahraini - actor.
Hameed Jaafar (?) Bahraini - actor.
Mahmoud Al Saffar (?) Bahraini - actor.
AbdelJaleel Ramadan (?) Bahraini - actor.
Moen Ali Ahmed (?) Bahraini - actor.
Mahdi AlQassap (?) Bahraini - actor.
Youssef Ibrahim Al Hessany (?) Bahraini - actor.
Ali Abdallah Eissa (?) Bahraini - actor.
Mokhtar Al Sefar (?) Bahraini - actor.
Hassan Al Eskafi (?) Bahraini - filmmaker.
Sayed Ali Sayed (?) Bahraini - actor.
Mohammed Hussein Al Sheikh (?) Bahraini - actor.
Abdallah Yakoub (?) Bahraini - actor.
Khaled Jnahy (?) Bahraini - actor.
Al Bassam Ali (?) Bahraini - actor.
Mohammed Abdallah Haram (?) Bahraini - actor.
Abla Abdallah (?) Bahraini - actor.
Sayed Hashem Ibrahim (?) Bahraini - actor.
AbdelNaby Attia (?) Bahraini - actor.
Ibrahim Bo Edrees (?) Bahraini - actor.
Ahmed El Sada (?) Bahraini - actor.
Ibrahim Mahdy (?) Bahraini - actor.
Hany Al Moussa (?) Bahraini - actor.
Salman Bokhari (?) Bahraini - actor.
Afnan Al-Murbaty (?) Bahraini - director.
Khaljan Jalal Al Balloushy (?) Bahraini - actor.
Abdallah Rashdan (?) Bahraini - actor.
Youssef Bader Al Saibaee (?) Bahraini - actor.
Mubarak Khaleefa (?) Bahraini - actor.
Ahmed Asadi (?) Bahraini - musician (instagram: ahmedasadiofficial).
Younis Alsayegh (?) Bahraini - singer and actor.
Hashem Al Qallaf (?) Bahraini - actor.
Talal Al Areefy (?) Bahraini - actor.
Younes Abdallah (?) Bahraini - actor.
Ali Abdallah Badou (?) Bahraini - actor.
Ali Bader Al Saibaee (?) Bahraini - actor.
Mohammed Ihsan Ramadan (?) Bahraini - actor.
Abdallah Eissa Abbas (?) Bahraini - actor.
Hussein Ali Al Motawie (?) Bahraini - actor.
Hussein AbdelNaby Thabet (?) Bahraini - actor.
Bader Mohammed (?) Bahraini - actor.
Seif Ali Al Ghurair (?) Bahraini - actor.
Habeeb Hilal Naseeb (?) Bahraini - actor.
Mohammed Fouad Mohammed (?) Bahraini - actor.
Hesham Youssef Abdallah (?) Bahraini - actor.
Jassem Al Damen actor (?) Bahraini - actor.
Cielo (?) Bahraini - actor.
Isa Alhamer (?) Bahraini - filmmaker.
Ahmad Najem (?) Bahraini - musician.
Nidal Badr (?) Bahraini - filmmaker.
Ibraheem Al-Tememy (?) Bahraini - filmmaker.
Ali Abdulemam (?) Bahraini - blogger.
Jassim (?) Bahraini - model (instagram: jasoom_333).
Ahsnoo (?) Bahraini - model (instagram: ahsnoo_bh).
A_al3rabii (?) Bahraini - model (instagram: a_al3rabii).
Waqas Mughal (?) Bahraini - model (instagram: waq_as_4).
Cesc Hussain (?) Bahraini - model (instagram: cesc_hussain).
M - Athletes:
Saad Mubarak Ali (1960) Bahraini - long-distance runner.
Hamood Sultan (1960) Bahraini - footballer.
Ahmed Hamada (1961) Bahraini - hurdler.
Khalid Ibrahim Jouma (1962) Bahraini - sprinter.
Saleh Sultan Faraj (1963) Bahraini - fencer.
Abdullah Al-Dosari (1965) Bahraini -  long-distance runner.
Taj Mohammad (1965) Bahraini - cricketer.
Abdulrahman Khaled (1966) Bahraini - fencer.
Khaled Abdullah Hassan (1966) Bahraini - hurdler.
Khalifa Hamad Khamis (1966) Bahraini - fencer.
Ahmed Al-Doseri (1966) Bahraini - fencer.
Rashid Riyadh Al-Ameeri (1967) Bahraini - hammer thrower.
Saber Mohamed Hasan (1967) Bahraini - cyclist.
Salman Sharida (1968) Bahraini - footballer.
Hamed Al-Jazaf (1969) Bahraini - footballer.
Youssef Ali Nesaif Boukhamas (1969) Bahraini - javelin thrower.
Jamal Ahmed Al-Doseri (1970) Bahraini - cyclist.
Abdulla Saleh (1970) Bahraini - footballer.
Mamdooh Al-Doseri (1971) Bahraini - cyclist.
Qamar Saeed (1971) Bahraini - cricketer,
Jameel Kadhem (1971) Bahraini - cyclist.
Mohammad Al-Shamlan (1972) Bahraini - footballer.
Ali Al Thani (1972) Bahraini - footballer.
Mohamed Saleh Hadj Haidara (1974) Bahraini - middle-distance runner.
Mirza Yaqoob (1974) Bahraini - cricketer.
Zafar Zaheer (1974) Bahraini - cricketer.
Talal Yousif / Talal Yousef Mohammed (1975) Bahraini - footballer.
Tareq Al-Farsani (1975) Bahraini - bodybuilder.
Mohammad Dar (1975) Bahraini - cricketer,
Shihara Perera (1975) Bahraini - cricketer,
Yaser Sadeq (1975) Bahraini - cricketer,
Mirza Baig (1975) Bahraini - cricketer,
Fawaz Ismail Johar (1976) Bahraini - hurdler.
Adnan Butt (1976) Bahraini - cricketer,
Hisham Abdulqader Abdulla (1976) Bahraini - volleyball player.
Salman Isa (1977) Bahraini - footballer.
Ali Aamer (1977) Bahraini - footballer.
Ghazi Al Kuwari (1977) Bahraini - footballer.
Salem Nasser Bakheet (1977) Bahraini - high jumper.
Shahzad Ahmed (1978) Bahraini - cricketer.
Muhammad Hanif (1978) Bahraini - cricketer.
Ahmed Al Hujairi (1978) Bahraini - footballer.
Rashad Jamal Salem (1979) Bahraini - footballer.
Mohamed Salmeen (1980) Bahraini - footballer.
Ebrahim Al Mishkhas (1980) Bahraini - footballer.
Rashid Al-Dosari (1980) Bahraini - footballer.
Vasantha Kunder (1980) Bahraini - cricketer.
Mohamed Husain (1980) Bahraini - footballer.
Ahmed Hassan Taleb (1980) Bahraini - footballer.
Imran Ghulam (1980) Bahraini - cricketer.
Abdulla Al-Marzooqi (1980) Bahraini - footballer.
Sayed Mahmood Jalal (1980) Bahraini - footballer.
Abdulrahman Abdulkarim (1980) Bahraini - footballer.
Husain Pete / Husain Ali (1981) Bahraini - footballer.
Mohamed Hubail (1981) Bahraini - footballer.
Mohamed Duaij Mahorfi (1981) Bahraini - footballer.
Hussain Ali Baba (1982) Bahraini - footballer.
Saleh Abdulhameed (1982) Bahraini - footballer.
A’ala Hubail (1982) Bahraini - footballer.
Hussain Salman (1982) Bahraini - footballer.
Hussain Karimi (1983) Bahraini - footballer.
Abbas Ahmed Khamis (1983) Bahraini - footballer.
Mahmood Abdulqader (1983) Bahraini - handball player.
Sayed Mohamed Adnan (1983) Bahraini - footballer.
Duaij Naser Abdulla (1983) Bahraini - footballer.
Hassan Al-Mosawi (1984) Bahraini - footballer.
Abdulwahab Al-Safi (1984) Bahraini - footballer.
Mahmood Abdulrahman (1984) Bahraini - footballer.
Hamad Rakea Al-Anezi (1984) Bahraini - footballer.
Dawood Youssef (1985) Bahraini - footballer.
Sayed Shubbar Alawi (1985) Bahraini - footballer.
Abdulla Al-Dakeel (1985) Bahraini - footballer.
Sayed Mohammed Jaffer (1985) Bahraini - footballer.
C. J. Giles (1985) Bahraini - basketball player.
Husain Al-Qaidoom (1986) Bahraini - handball player.
Ismail Abdullatif (1986) Bahraini - footballer.
Ahillen Beadle (1986) Bahraini - cricketer.
Ali Khamis (1986) Bahraini - handball player.
Shahzad Siddique (1987) Bahraini - cricketer.
Heri Setiawan (1987) Bahraini - badminton player.
Mohamed Merza (1987) Bahraini - handball player.
Reem Al-Hashmi (1987) Bahraini - footballer.
Mahmood Abdulla (1987) Bahraini - footballer.
Mahmood Al-Ajmi (1987) Bahraini - footballer.
James Love (1987) Bahraini - footballer.
Abbas Ayyad (1987) Bahraini - footballer.
Ahmed Abdulla Ali (1987) Bahraini - footballer.
Jamal Rashid (1988) Bahraini - footballer.
Abo Baker Adam (1988) Bahraini - footballer.
Husain Al-Sayyad (1988) Bahraini - handball player.
Hesham Shehab (1988) Bahraini - swimmer.
Ahmed Al Khattal (1988) Bahraini - footballer.
Ali Haram (1988) Bahraini - footballer.
Mohamed Al-Maqabi (1988) Bahraini - handball player.
Hasan Al-Fardan (1988) Bahraini - handball player.
Hassan Chani (1988) Bahraini - long-distance runner.
Ali Merza (1988) Bahraini - handball player.
Faisal Bodahoom (1988) Bahraini - footballer.
Abdulla Yaser (1988) Bahraini - footballer.
Dawood Saad (1988) Bahraini - footballer.
Mahdi Saad (1989) Bahraini - handball player.
Sami Al-Husaini (1989) Bahraini - footballer.
Rashed Al-Hooti (1989) Bahraini - footballer.
Jasim Al-Salatna (1989) Bahraini - handball player.
Zouhair Aouad (1989) Bahraini - long-distance runner.
Mohamed Abdulredha (1989) Bahraini - handball player.
Hamed Al-Doseri (1989) Bahraini - footballer.
Mohamed Abdulhusain (1989) Bahraini - handball player.
Mohammed Tayeb Al Alawi (1989) Bahraini - footballer.
The Hawk / Mohammed Shahid (1989) Bahraini - mixed martial artist.
Abdulrahim Abdulhameed (1990) Bahraini - Taekwondo practitioner.
Mohamed Al Romaihi (1990) Bahraini - footballer.
Abdulla Al-Haza'a (1990) Bahraini - footballer.
Abdulwahab Al-Malood (1990) Bahraini - footballer.
Menasheh Idafar (1991) Bahraini / Iraqi Jewish - race driver.
Ahmed Merza (1991) Bahraini - footballer.
Sayed Jaafar Ahmed (1991) Bahraini - footballer.
Ashraf Waheed Al Sebaie (1991) Bahraini - footballer.
Hasan Al-Samahiji (1991) Bahraini - handball player.
Ali Abdulla Eid (1991) Bahraini - handball player.
Bilal Basham (1991) Bahraini - handball player.
Waleed Al Hayam (1991) Bahraini - footballer.
Mahdi Abduljabbar (1991) Bahraini - footballer.
Ahmed Juma (1992) Bahraini - footballer.
Abdulkarim Fardan (1992) Bahraini - footballer.
Sayed Dhiya Saeed (1992) Bahraini - footballer.
Komail Mahfoodh (1992) Bahraini - handball player.
Mahdi Al-Humaidan (1993) Bahraini - footballer.
Mohamed Habib (1993) Bahraini - handball player.
Abdulla Yusuf Helal (1993) Bahraini - footballer.
Abdulla Shallal (1993) Bahraini - footballer.
Ahmed Al-Maqabi (1994) Bahraini - handball player.
Kamil Al Aswad (1994) Bahraini - footballer.
Sayed Redha Isa (1994) Bahraini - footballer.
Sayed Baqer (1994) Bahraini - footballer.
Ali Khamis (1995) Bahraini - hurdler.
Ali Madan (1995) Bahraini - footballer.
Khalid Baba (1996) Bahraini - swimmer.
Farhan Farhan (1996) Bahraini - swimmer.
Hasan Madan (1996) Bahraini - handball player.
Jasim Al-Shaikh (1996) Bahraini - footballer.
Hamad Al-Shamsan (1997) Bahraini - footballer.
Ahmed Bughammar (1997) Bahraini - footballer.
Mohammed Al-Hardan (1997) Bahraini - footballer.
Sayed Hashim Isa (1998) Bahraini - footballer.
Mohamed Marhoon (1998) Bahraini - footballer.
Ahmed Jalal (1998) Bahraini - handball player.
Abdulla Yaseen (1998) Bahraini - handball player.
Ahmed Husain (1999) Bahraini - handball player.
Ahmed Al-Sherooqi (2000) Bahraini - footballer.
Husain Mahfoodh (2001) Bahraini - handball player.
Ahmed Meshaima (?) Bahraini - paralympic track and field athlete.
Hamad Bader (?) Bahraini - swimmer.
Esa Fadel (?) Bahraini - swimmer.
Omar Jasim (?) Bahraini - swimmer.
Husain Habib (?) Bahraini - footballer.
Ahmed Mushaima (?) Bahraini - footballer.
Hassan Al Mosawi (?) Bahraini - footballer.
Mohamed Jaffar (?) Bahraini - footballer.
Nabeel Saleh Mubarak (?) Bahraini - swimmer.
Adnan Ali Daif (?) Bahraini - footballer.
Abdul Rahman Jassim (?) Bahraini - modern pentathlete.
Khamis Eid Rafe Thani (?) Bahraini - footballer.
Mohamed Juma (?) Bahraini - footballer.
Ali Saeed Abdulla (?) Bahraini - footballer.
Faisal Abdulaziz (?) Bahraini - footballer.
Abdul Rahman Ahmed (?) Bahraini - footballer.
Juma Hilal Faraj (?) Bahraini - footballer.
Adel Abbas (?) Bahraini - footballer.
Saad Al Amer (?) Bahraini - footballer.
Fayad Mahmoud Hissain (?) Bahraini - footballer.
Mahmood AlMaghrabi (?) Bahraini - bodybuilder (instagram: mamoo95).
8 notes · View notes
aserne · 2 years
Video
Biden liberó a uno de los terroristas que planificaron el ataque a las Torres Gemelas en un acuerdo con Arabia Saudita El pasado lunes, el presidente Joe Biden ordenó liberar de la prisión de máxima seguridad en Guantánamo a Mohammad Ahmad al-Qahtani, uno de los terroristas de Al-Qaeda que planificaron el ataque a las Torres Gemelas el 11 de septiembre del 2001. A sus 46 años, tenía tan solo 25 cuando fue uno de los 20 operativos de la red terrorista en planificar y perpetrar el ataque. Según la Casa Blanca, fue liberado por cuestiones de derechos humanos, bajo la excusa de que sufría “problemas mentales”, entre ellos, una aguda esquizofrenia. De todos modos, su liberación es parte de un acuerdo de Biden con Arabia Saudita, de donde este terrorista es oriundo, para que la principal nación productora de petróleo aumente la oferta de barriles de crudo, y generar así una reducción en el precio internacional de este commodity, que viene experimentando una brutal suba en los últimos meses por la inflación y la guerra en Ucrania. Al-Qahtani fue enviado en un vuelo directamente desde Cuba hasta Arabia Saudita este lunes, y según reportaron los medios árabes, ya fue internado en un asilo para enfermos mentales, donde cumplirá su sentencia. Líderes republicanos protestaron e intentaron frenar la medida, pero sin éxito. Nunca antes un prisionero vinculado con el ataque terrorista más brutal que recibió Estados Unidos en toda su historia había sido liberado, y la decisión de Biden fue de por más polémica. https://www.instagram.com/p/CbC68wcA0f5/?utm_medium=tumblr
0 notes
cultml · 2 years
Link
0 notes
innocentamit · 2 years
Text
JUST IN: 9/11 Terrorist, Known as the "20th Hijacker," Released From Gitmo by Biden Regime
JUST IN: 9/11 Terrorist, Known as the “20th Hijacker,” Released From Gitmo by Biden Regime
A Guantanamo Bay detainee who has been held at the facility since 2002 for his role in the terror attacks on September 11th, 2001 has been released from US custody and sent back to his home country by the Biden regime, according to the Department of Defense (DoD). Mohammad Mani Ahmad al-Qahtani, also known as 9 / 11’s “20th hijacker”Was repatriated to Saudi Arabia this week, where he will receive…
View On WordPress
0 notes
creepingsharia · 5 years
Text
Elite U.S. Universities Hide Information on Funding From Sharia Nation of Qatar
Elite U.S. Universities Hide Information on Funding From Sharia Nation of Qatar
Tumblr media
Qatar funds al-Qaeda and other terrorists…and elite U.S. universities.
Source: Elite Universities Hide Information On Funding From Ultraconservative Nation Of Qatar | by Luke Rosiak at The Daily Caller
Qatar gave $1 billion to elite American universities since 2011, according to Department of Education data.
The Qatar Foundation is suing the Texas attorney general to prevent information about Qatari funding from becoming public.
Universities are taking money from Qatar, a nation with a checkered human rights history, as students rally for social justice causes.
The nation of Qatar, a Sharia-law monarchy that has been accused of trying to influence other countries’ governments, gave $1 billion to elite American universities since 2011, according to Department of Education data.
Some universities have refused to discuss where strings are attached to that money. The Qatar Foundation, for example, filed a lawsuit against the Texas attorney general Oct. 12 to hide information about the $225 million Qatar has awarded to Texas A&M University since 2011.
The Qatar Foundation hired the politically connected powerhouse law firm Squire Patton Boggs for the suit, which was filed in response to a researcher’s public information request regarding the foreign funding.
The biggest recipient of Qatar’s educational funding, Georgetown University, repeatedly ignored requests from The Daily Caller News Foundation for basic information about the funding and whether it implicates academic independence.
Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain have accused Qatar of meddling in other nations’ internal affairs as well as funding terrorism. Qatar also wields influence through its media group, Al Jazeera.
For a nation seeking sway over the U.S., Georgetown University would be a particularly tactical site of influence. Georgetown has received nearly $333 million from Qatar since 2011 — far more than any other U.S. school has received from any foreign nation.
Georgetown is situated in the seat of power, near the State Department, and its experts are frequently cited by groups shaping policy. In fact, the Jesuit Catholic university trains many of the United States’ future diplomats at its Walsh School of Foreign Service.
Its website notes that “At SFS, you can study with former Secretaries of State” and access “connections to diplomats from just about every country, and of course, the seat of the U.S. government. Our location gives SFS the extraordinary opportunity for us to engage (and sometimes even influence) the debates that lead to real action.”
Thanks to the Qatari funding, Georgetown and its foreign service program has an entire outpost in Qatar. “Georgetown University in Qatar (GU-Q) is an additional location of Georgetown University, based in Education City in Doha,” its website says. “The University offers a four year undergraduate program in international affairs leading to the Bachelor of Science in Foreign Service (BSFS) degree.”
The vast majority of funds from Qatar were contracts, the Education Department data shows, requiring Georgetown to do something in return for the money, unlike gifts.
Top Foreign Funders of U.S. Universities, 2011-2016 (Source: Department of Education) Country Amount Qatar $1,024,065,043 England $761,586,394 Saudi Arabia $613,608,797 China $426,526,085 Canada $402,535,603 Hong Kong $394,446,859
  …
Georgetown spokesman Matt Hill ignored questions from TheDCNF about the strings attached to such funds and whether they could influence curriculum and would not provide the contract governing them.
The dean of Georgetown’s Qatar campus is Ahmad Dallal, who the Middle East Forum describes as “a long-time and enthusiastic supporter of the State Department-designated terrorist group Hezbollah. Dallal, who chaired Georgetown’s Department of Arabic and Islamic Studies from 2003 to 2009, is also pro-Hamas, pro-Boycott/Divestment/Sanctions (BDS) against Israel, co-author of an Arabic textbook whose maps omit Israel, and signatory of a letter warning that Israel would engage in ‘ethnic cleansing’ at the start of the Iraq war.”
The Zachor Legal Institute, which opposes the movement to sanction and boycott Israel, submitted a Freedom of Information request in May to Texas A&M (TAMU), a state university, for “a summary of all amounts of funding or donations received” from Qatar and a long list of proxies.
The office of state Attorney General Ken Paxton ruled “the university must withhold the donors’ identifying information … the university must release the remaining information.”
Most of the money to TAMU were contracts, not donations.
The Qatar Foundation’s high-powered lawyers intervened, arguing the relevant portion of the attorney general’s ruling “requiring release of all remaining information other than donor identity is incorrect and without force or effect.”
They wrote:
This is an action to prevent disclosure of confidential financial information concerning the relationship between QF and Texas A&M University … QF operates programs dedicated to education, science, and community development. It is responsible for funding much of the development in Education City, a hub for higher education outside Doha. … In addition to TAMU, Carnegie Mellon, Cornell, Georgetown, Northwestern, and Virginia Commonwealth University have all established campuses in Education City.
The Attorney General concluded that TAMU could withhold information identifying ‘donors’ under section 552.1235. But the Attorney General stated that TAMU would be required to release all remaining information requested, which would include information related to payments made by QF to TAMU pursuant to a contract. In so doing, the Attorney General implicitly ruled that those payments were not ‘donations,’ and therefore not exempt from disclosure under the PIA … The information related to these grants and donations is also confidential commercial information and constitutes a trade secret.
The Qatar Foundation’s general counsel is Michael Mitchell, a former vice president of Ohio State University.
Marc Greendorfer, an attorney for the Zachor Legal Institute, responded to the Texas attorney general Nov. 8: “One of the Qatari entities that was the subject of our original request has taken the extraordinary step of taking the Texas Attorney General to court to suppress the information that we requested. Now, with the most recent attempt by TAMU to prevent public disclosure of information as to how Qatari entities are involved with a Texas public university, the intrigue grows, and we have to wonder what it is they are trying to keep from the public.”
TAMU and the Qatar Foundation did not return requests for comment.
The university operations by Qatar are just one prong in a massive public relations and influence push that includes millions to lobbyists and public relations firms in the U.S.
It is also not the only involvement of Squire Patton Boggs with Middle Eastern countries. The same law firm also has a $100,000-a-month contract with Qatar’s rival Saudi Arabia for the kingdom to retain former Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott and former Democratic Louisiana Sen. John Breaux.
According to Foreign Agent Registration Act disclosures, it worked directly with Saud al-Qahtani, the same aide who allegedly organized the killing of a Washington Post columnist.
29 notes · View notes