Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Muslim Brotherhood Hate Group CAIR Sought Gaddafi's Money


CAIR means to destroy this country. The Muslim Brotherhood project is to
eliminate and destroy Western Civilization from within. In a rational world,
CAIR would be labeled a terrorist organizaton. Is the increasingly
ridiculous O'Reilly still polishing CAIR's knob?

CAIR Officials Sought Gaddafi Money
<http://www.investigativeproject.org/2709/cair-officials-sought-gaddafi-mone
y>  IPT News

Nihad Awad, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations
(CAIR), asked Muammar Gaddafi to underwrite CAIR's efforts in the United
States during a September 2009 audience with the Libyan dictator.

According to an account of the meeting in a Libyan news website, Awad was
joined by two other leading CAIR officials in praising Gaddafi's leadership
and asking him to help underwrite a program to distribute 1 million copies
of the Quran to government officials and the general public in America and
to help start up a new foundation Awad was trying to launch.

The account was published in Arabic by Libyalive.net, and was translated by
the Investigative Project on Terrorism. Libyalive.net describes itself as
"an independent Libyan electronic newspaper," but the story about Gaddafi's
visit is attributed to the Jamahiriya News Agency, Libya's official state
news service.

Awad's pleas to Gaddafi's generosity came after the Libyan leader left
United Nations observers slack jawed at his rambling, 100-minute speech to
the General Assembly.

Now, after Gaddafi started killing his own people as he tries to fend off a
popular uprising, Awad and CAIR have denounced him as a madman. They have
organized rallies and news conferences demanding that violence against
Libyan civilians by Gaddafi's forces stop.

"Join us to support the people of Libya against a dictatorship," a February
24 release from CAIR's Chicago chapter said.

Concerns over the Libyan government were overlooked in September 2009, when
Gaddafi traveled to New York to speak to the U.N. There, Gaddafi ignored the
15-minute limit on speeches, going on a tirade about everything from the
assassinations of Martin Luther King and John F. Kennedy to his belief that
the U.N. Security Council was similar to al-Qaida, calling it the "terror
council."

At a later reception with Gaddafi, Awad, national spokesman Ibrahim Hooper
and Chairman Larry Shaw made a direct appeal to the Libyan leader to donate
to CAIR programs.

"Your speech has had an impact in the hearts of many people in the world,"
Awad said. He hailed Gaddafi as "the world Islamic popular leader," saying
"[w]e appreciate your efforts over the years, and wish also to extend your
interest will extend to Muslims in America, God willing."

In addition to the Quran program, Awad asked for money to help launch the
Muslim Peace Foundation. That group would work to "have an active role in
American life so that we can repair the relationship [with the Muslim world]
and restore it to what it should be," Awad said.

The foundation was created in May 2008, corporate records filed in
Washington, D.C. show. Officers include Shaw and Awad, who is listed as
Nehad Hammad. Awad also used the name Nehad Hammad in CAIR's founding
articles of incorporation in 1994. During a 2003 deposition in a civil
lawsuit, Awad acknowledged his "full and complete name is Nihad Awad
Hammad."

A third Muslim Peace Foundation founder is listed as Winslow Seale. That is
the name of Dar al-Hijrah mosque outreach director Johari Abdul Malik before
his conversion to Islam. Records from the Department of Homeland Security
obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request show that Dar
al-Hijrah is considered "associated with Islamic extremists" and "has been
linked to numerous individuals linked to terrorism financing."

"We hope for your noble generosity in taking this project under your wing,"
Awad told Gaddafi, "so you will be in the vanguard, as we have come to
expect of you..God willing, you will as you have promised us, be the first
to take the lead in this project."

In a radio interview Monday, Awad said the pitch came up empty. Because the
request failed, he claimed, CAIR officials did no wrong soliciting Gaddafi.

"But we always hold our views on the principles of justice and human dignity
very straight," Awad said on WPFW radio in Washington, D.C. "We never
received a penny from his group, from his government. And in fact when he
started abusing and killing civilians we condemned him and we support the
international community's effort to restore justice and peace to Libya by
protecting civilians. We're very, very principled when it comes to these
matters."

The United States and other Western governments were not as principled, Awad
said. "We should not wait until these regimes collapse so that we stand with
the people who have been oppressed by these people . Our foreign policy has
to be aligned with our values, the values of equality, justice, freedom and
all these things that we always try to spread around the world and
democracy. So when we see an oppressive dictator persecuting his people,
killing his people, if this is on the news we speak up. But if it's not in
the news we ignore it."

Soliciting money from Gaddafi was not legal until 2007, when the United
States removed Libya from its list of terror-sponsoring states. To get to
that point, Gaddafi renounced terrorism, gave up his nuclear weapons program
and compensated relatives of those killed on Pan Am Flight 103, which was
blown up over Lockerbie, Scotland in a Libyan plot.

But Gaddafi's regime remained brutally repressive at home. The State
Department's report on Libya covering 2009 cited a poor human rights record.
"Continuing problems included reported disappearances; torture; arbitrary
arrest; lengthy pretrial and sometimes incommunicado detention; official
impunity; and poor prison conditions," it said. "Denial of fair public trial
by an independent judiciary, political prisoners and detainees, and the lack
of judicial recourse for alleged human rights violations were also
problems."

CAIR officials loudly condemn Gaddafi's brutal response to the popular
uprising against his regime. "Mr. Gadhafi is nothing short of a madman like
those who came before him, like Mussolini and Hitler," said Dawud Walid, the
head of CAIR's Michigan office.

"The Obama administration," Walid told a reporter, "needs to cut diplomatic
ties [with] all of these dictators in the Muslim Arab world and to stop
propping up these dictators."

But the solicitation to Gaddafi was not CAIR's only attempt at significant
foreign funding from Muslim autocrats. Though its website continues to say
that allegations that "CAIR receives foreign money" is "Internet
Disinformation," the organization sent delegations to Saudi Arabia and the
United Arab Emirates in 2006 seeking millions of dollars in donations from
wealthy Gulf donors.

State Department records show Awad, Hooper and Shaw were part of those
delegations. One cable, obtained via the Freedom of Information Act, said
the group admitted it was in Saudi Arabia "to solicit $50 million in
governmental and non-governmental contributions."

for National Security



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