Posted on 09/12/2021 9:08:15 AM PDT by Conservat1
People Around the World Watch in Horror By The Associated Press
Sept. 11, 2001
LONDON -- People around the world watched in horror as images of terror in the United States filled their television screens Tuesday. On the West Bank, Palestinians celebrated but most world leaders expressed solidarity with an America that looked more vulnerable than ever.
Iraqi television played a patriotic song that begins "Down with America!" as it showed the World Trade Center's towers falling.
https://www.nytimes.com/2001/09/11/international/people-around-the-world-watch-in-horror.html
Palestinians celebrate in the streets - Irish Examiner
It has been reported that Palestinians are celebrating in the streets.
TUE, 11 SEP, 2001 - 17:55
It has been reported that Palestinians are celebrating in the streets.
Thousands of Palestinians celebrated the terror attacks in the United States, chanting "God is Great" and distributing candy to passers-by, even as their leader, Yasser Arafat, said he was horrified.
The U.S. government has become increasingly unpopular in the West Bank and
Gaza Strip in the past year of Israeli-Palestinian fighting, with many Palestinians accusing Washington of siding with Israel.
In the West Bank town of Nablus, about 3,000 people poured into the street shortly after the attacks on the World Trade Center in New York and government targets in Washington.
Demonstrators distributed candy in a traditional gesture of celebration.
Several Palestinian gunmen shot in the air, while other marchers carried
Palestinian flags.
Nawal Abdel Fatah, 48, wearing a long, black dress, threw sweets in the air, saying she was happy...
Her daughter Maysoon, 22, said she hoped the next attack would be launched against Tel Aviv.
In traditionally Arab east Jerusalem, there was a smaller gathering of about two dozen people, many of them young children led in chants by adults. Some drivers passing the scene honked their horns and flashed victory signs from their windows
https://www.irishexaminer.com/world/arid-30023338.html
Around the world, terror met with disdain, anger
Around the world, terror met with disdain, anger
By BETH GARDINER Associated Press Sep 12, 2001
Iraq, some Palestinians celebrate in streets
...Britain and Belgium banned commercial flights over their capitals, and Britain warned its citizens traveling in the United States to beware of possible further attacks. Israel closed its airspace to foreign flights and evacuated staff from diplomatic missions and Jewish institutions around the world.
In the West Bank town of Nablus, about 3,000 people poured into the streets shortly after the attacks began, chanting "God is Great" and handing out candy in a traditional gesture of celebration.
https://missoulian.com/around-the-world-terror-met-with-disdain-anger/article_a2f7ff40-7a44-566a-aa95-cb6fbb03a213.amp.html
Shock felt around world; Palestinians celebrate in streets - Kitsap Sun
Sep 12, 2001 — ... 3,000 people poured into the streets shortly after the attacks began, chanting "God is Great"
https://web.kitsapsun.com/archive/2001/09-12/0057_america_s_day_of_terror__world_re.html
Pained world condemns acts, but some cheer
Published Sep 10, 2005
Governments around the world offered condolences to the United States after the terrorists attacks Tuesday, but thousands of Palestinians celebrated in the West Bank and in Lebanese refugee camps.
In the West Bank town of Nablus, Palestinians cheered and distributed candy to passers-by, and Iraqi television played a patriotic song that began "Down with America!" as it showed the World Trade Center towers collapsing...
https://www.tampabay.com/archive/2001/09/12/pained-world-condemns-acts-but-some-cheer/
In the West Bank town of Nablus, about 3,000 people poured into the streets shortly after the attacks began, chanting "God is Great" and handing out candy in a traditional gesture of celebration.
Bin-Laden Poster Seen at Gaza Rally
The Associated Press
Friday, Sept. 14, 2001; 6:09 p.m. EDT
JERUSALEM –– About 1,500 Palestinians, many supporters of the Islamic militant group Hamas, marched in a Gaza Strip refugee camp on Friday, burning Israeli flags and carrying a large poster of Osama bin Laden, who has been named as a key suspect in this week's terror attacks in the United States.
After the rally, plainclothes Palestinian policemen questioned several journalists, including staffers of foreign news agencies, and confiscated videotape and film as well as camera equipment. An Associated Press Television News video was among the materials taken, and an AP photographer was warned by officials not to publish pictures of the bin-Laden poster.
AP protested and demanded return of the video and other material.
The journalists were told police would review the material before deciding whether to release it.
Officials of Yasser Arafat's self-rule government refused to comment on the record and did not respond immediately to AP's protest.
http://web.archive.org/web/20010915160506/http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/aponline/20010914/aponline180932_000.htm
Wednesday - September 12, 2001
Jerusalem Post (14:00) Report: Armed Palestinians threatened photojournalists
Reports indicate armed Palestinians trapped foreign photojournalists inside a Nablus hotel late yesterday while thousands took to the streets in celebration of the terror attacks in the United States.
The journalists were reportedly forced to remain confined in the hotel, guarded by armed Palestinians - both in uniform and wearing civilian clothes - while the festivities continued in the streets. At least one photographer who did manage to capture images of the celebrations was told his life would be in danger if the pictures were eventually published.
Palestinian Police confiscates footage at Gaza rally Jerusalem Post Staff and Ap.
--------------
JERUSALEM (September 16) - About 1,500 Palestinians, many supporters of Hamas, marched in a Gaza Strip refugee camp Friday, burning Israeli flags and carrying a large poster of Osama bin Laden, an exiled Saudi millionaire who US Secretary of State Colin Powell has named a key suspect in last week's terror attacks in the United States.
After the rally, plainclothes Palestinian policemen questioned several journalists, including members of foreign news agencies, and confiscated videotape, film, and other camera equipment.
An Associated Press Television News video was among the materials taken, and an AP photographer was warned by officials not to publish pictures of the bin Laden poster. AP protested and demanded the return of the video and other material.
The journalists were told police would review the material before deciding whether or not to release it. Palestinian Authority officials refused to comment on the record and did not respond immediately to AP's protest. The Palestinian Police said in a statement that the rally in the Nusseirat refugee camp took place without a permit. "The Palestinian Police confiscated media material which documented illegal acts," the statement said.
Earlier last week, Palestinian Police stopped camera teams and photographers from covering a rally in Nablus in which several thousand Palestinians celebrated the attacks in the US. Palestinian officials said the demonstration did not represent widespread Palestinian opinion.
According to one source, the Reuters correspondent in Nablus not only agreed to the PA demand not to document the rally, but attempted to press his AP counterpart to follow suit. He was unable to reach him in time. The AP cameraman later received death threats.
https://jr.co.il/terror/usa/threat.txt
AP protests threats to freelance camerman who filmed Palestinian rally
Associated Press | September 12, 2001
JERUSALEM (AP) - The Associated Press on Wednesday protested to the Palestinian Authority about threats against a freelance camerman who filmed Palestinians celebrating terror attacks in the United States.
The videographer, on assignment for Associated Press Television News, was summoned to a Palestinian Authority security office and told that the material must not be aired. Calls in the name of the Tanzim militia, an armed group associated with Yasser Arafat's Fatah group, warned him he would be held responsible and made what he interpreted as threats on his life.
Several Palestinian Authority officials spoke to AP in Jerusalem urging that the material not be broadcast. Ahmed Abdel Rahman, Arafat's Cabinet secretary, said the Palestinian Authority "cannot guarantee the life" of the cameraman if the footage was broadcast.
The cameraman then requested that the material not be aired. In light of the danger, APTN has not released the footage of the rally in Nablus.
AP news stories reported worldwide on the demonstration in Nablus and AP distributed still pictures and video of similar rallies in east Jerusalem, Lebanon and elsewhere. An AP still photographer did not take pictures of the Nablus rally after being warned at the scene not to do so.
The protest by AP Chief of Bureau Dan Perry said, "I ask the assurances of the Palestinian Authority that you will protect our journalists from threats and attempts at intimidation and that no harm would come to our freelance cameraman from distribution of the film."
http://www.imra.org.il/story.php?id=8170
اختراع الكذبة الشريرة كأن إسرائيليين يرقصون - اخترعها محمد الأمير عطا - والد القاتل الجماعي في 11 سبتمبر
___________
Father insists son just a scapegoat in attack on N.Y. landmark
By E.A. Torriero and Tribune Staff Reporter. Staff Reporter.
Tribune Staff Reporter E.A. Torriero Is On Assignment In Cairo
Sep 20, 2001
... Increasingly, Arabs blame drug lords, the Israeli secret service, the Japanese Red Army and the American Mafia for engineering the attacks--unsubstantiated theories that appear as fact in newspapers across the region and are gaining popularity among the public.
"They want to try to hang this on the Arab world," Atta said of U.S. authorities searching for others responsible for the deaths .. in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Talking with journalists in his suburban Cairo apartment, Atta stomped around the living room, sometimes screaming, often ranting until his face turned red, denouncing America and its leaders.
Atta, 65, a reclusive, semiretired lawyer, said he talked to his son by phone two days after the World Trade Center attack. He refuses to believe that his only son could be dead and is sure America is framing him through fabricated reports of his movements from Germany to Florida before the hijacking. "Mohamed is smarter, more honorable and more polite than you and me both," he said, a cigarette dangling from his mouth. "America has a long history of terrorism dating back to the Ku Klux Klan."
When pressed, Atta refused to discuss personal details concerning his son, a 33-year-old urban planner who left Cairo in 1992 to attend schools in Germany and Italy...
Atta refuses to speculate why his son has not surfaced if he is alive. But he says that U.S. pressures have likely forced his son to go into hiding, and is worried that Western agents may be holding him, although he has no proof to support that.
The elder Atta last saw his son about a year and half ago in Cairo. The father said he never visited his son abroad and does not believe he was in Florida learning how to fly a plane. He fumed at reports that his son had a passport from the United Arab Emirates.
"He is Egyptian and wouldn't be anything else," said Atta, who scoffed at news that his son and three other alleged hijackers left a flight manual in a rental car parked at Boston's Logan International Airport. But those who knew the younger Atta say it is unlikely that he would have shared details of his life with his father because the two were distant...
______
The Day That Changed America
By Evan Thomas, Newsweek, 12/30/01.
In Egypt in the late '80s, engineering schools, full of disillusioned students, were prime recruiting grounds for the Muslim Brotherhood; in the country's stagnant state-run economy, young engineering grads could look forward to low-paying, dead-end jobs in a bloated bureaucracy. Atta's parents were more ambitious for their children. His overbearing father, the elder Mohamed Al-Amir Atta, who grandly but preposterously described himself to NEWSWEEK as "one of the most important lawyers in Cairo," wanted his only son to study abroad. Only by learning German--"the language of engineers"--could young Atta catch up to his accomplished sisters, both of whom had doctorates. His son should go to Germany, the father decided.
______Suspected ringleader's father condemns bin Laden tape as a 'forgery' Sarah El Deeb, Associated Press Writer Thursday, December 13, 2001 (12-13) 10:59 PST (AP) -- With BC-Afghan-Bin Laden Tape, Bjt CAIRO, Egypt (AP) --
The father of Mohammed Atta dismissed as a "forgery" a videotape released Thursday in which Osama bin Laden calls his son the leader of the Sept. 11 suicide hijackers. The father, Mohamed al-Amir al-Sayed Awad Atta, said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press that he had not seen the tape, but declared it a "farce. All this is a forgery, a fabrication!"
"The whole world has been saying this name (Mohammed Atta). Where did bin Laden get the name from? Bin Laden got it from America," Atta said.
According to the translation of the tape, which was released by the United States on Thursday, bin Laden identifies Atta as being "in charge of the group."
U.S. investigators believe that Atta was the ringleader behind the hijackings of the four passenger planes that crashed into the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and a Pennsylvanian field.
The elder Atta, a 65-year-old retired lawyer, has repeatedly denied his son's involvement in the terrorist attacks that killed thousands and sparked the U.S.-led war against terrorism.
He has said his son might have been kidnapped and his papers stolen to implicate him in the attacks. He has also claimed to have spoken to his son by telephone after Sept. 11.
"America is the land of aberration and forgery," the father said, shouting "damn America!" before abruptly hanging up. Atta, 33, is believed to have been at the controls of American Airlines Flight 11 when it hit the World Trade Center and has been linked to hijackers on two of the three other planes.
Investigators say Atta was part of a terrorist cell in Hamburg, Germany, and received flight training in Florida.
In the months before the attack, he met with Islamic extremists in Spain, inquired about crop-dusters in Florida, conferred with an Iraqi intelligence agent in Europe and skipped a court date in Florida for driving without a license.
______
Stephen E. Atkins, 9/11: The Essential Reference Guide,' ABC-CLIO, 2021, p. 16.
Atta, Mohamed el- Amir Awad el- Sayed (1968–2001) Mohamed el- Amir Awad el- Sayed Atta was the commander of the Al Qaeda team that hijacked ... His father was a middle- class lawyer with ties to the fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood.
______Father of lead 9/11 hijacker defends son
Alone and tacitly mourning, the father of the lead Sept. 11 hijacker, Mohammed Atta, defends his son with denial and defiance. Sept. 11, 2004, 12:07 AM EDT / Source: The Associated Press
The answers given by the snowy-haired, 68-year-old Egyptian in his apartment near the Pyramids tend to echo the anguish, defiance and inherent contradictions that have typified many Arab responses in the three years since the planes crashed into the twin trade towers and the Pentagon. First, the denial: The attacks weren't the work of Muslim fanatics. "Look to Mossad," Israeli intelligence.
Next, the rationalization: "No nation has done as much evil in the world as America did, and you do not expect God to punish it?" And then the defiance: "If a Palestinian flies a plane and strikes the White House and kills Bush, his wife and his daughters he will go to heaven. So will any Muslim who defends his faith."
There have always been Arab commentators urging their publics to look inward for answers rather than put all the blame on America. Lately, following the blood bath in the Russian school seized by Chechen attackers, such thinking has grown more noticeable. "Our terrorist sons are an end-product of our corrupted culture," Abdulrahman al-Rashed, general manager of Al-Arabiya television, wrote in a newspaper column after the massacre in Russia.
But the urge to blame outsiders remains strong, as evidenced by the paperbacks sold on Cairo's streets that explore the latest conspiracy theories, and which Atta cites as proof of Mossad involvement... Bin Laden himself described Atta in a videotape months after the attacks as being "in charge of the group" that attacked America...
Atta's father would say only that he raised his boy to be a good Muslim.
"Muslims should not accept injustice and half-solutions," he said. "Islam says, 'fight those who fight you."'
______Atta's father praises London bombs
Wednesday, July 20, 2005 Posted: 1257 GMT (2057 HKT)
CAIRO, Egypt (CNN) -- The father of one of the hijackers who commandeered the first plane that crashed into the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001, praised the recent terror attacks in London and said many more would follow.
Speaking to CNN producer Ayman Mohyeldin Tuesday in his apartment in the upper-middle-class Cairo suburb of Giza, Mohamed el-Amir said he would like to see more attacks like the July 7 bombings of three London subway trains and a bus that killed 52 people, plus the four bombers.
Displayed prominently in the apartment were pictures of el-Amir's son, Mohamed Atta, the man who is believed to have piloted American Airlines Flight 11 into the north tower of the World Trade Center as part of the attacks on the United States.
El-Amir said the attacks in the United States and the July 7 attacks in London were the beginning of what would be a 50-year religious war, in which there would be many more fighters like his son.
He declared that terror cells around the world were a "nuclear bomb that has now been activated and is ticking."
The man, who gave his age as "at least 70," said he had no sorrow for what happened in London, and said there was a double standard in the way the world viewed the victims in London and victims in the Islamic world.
Cursing in Arabic, el-Amir also denounced Arab leaders and Muslims who condemned the London attacks as being traitors and non-Muslims.
He passionately vowed that he would do anything within his power to encourage more attacks.
When asked if he would allow a CNN crew to videotape another interview with him, el-Amir said he would give his permission -- for a price of $5,000.
That money, he said, would not be kept for himself, but would be donated to someone to carry out another terror attack. El-Amir said that $5,000 was about how much it would cost to finance another attack in London.
CNN's crew refused to pay for the interview and left after el-Amir's request. It is CNN policy not to pay people for interviews.
A lawyer by trade, el-Amir had a sign on his apartment door saying he was a consultant. The security guard for the apartment building said el-Amir had been under surveillance by Egyptian agents for several months after the September 11 attacks, but no one had been watching him recently.
______
David Sheen, Were the notorious...
The Gray Zone, Sep 11, 2021.
At no point did Maria or any witness allege that the Israeli men were dancing in any way. The FBI report refers to the men as the "Israeli Nationals" and "The High Fivers.".
The first documented allegation that the men had danced in celebration of the Twin Towers attack comes not from any American law enforcement agency, but rather from the father of Mohammad Atta, the ringleader of the Al Qaeda-affiliated cell that hijacked American Airlines Flight 11 and crashed it into the North Tower of the World Trade Center.
On September 28, 2001, a USA Today article entitled "Conspiracy theories say Israel did it" cited Egyptian news agency MENA's interview with the elder Atta, complaining that insufficient focus was being paid to reports that the FBI had "seized a number of Jews while they were dancing in celebration over the incidents."... An internal FBI memo dated September 24, 2001 stated: "Both the Newark and the New York Divisions conducted a thorough investigation which determined that none of the Israelis had any information on prior knowledge regarding the bombing of the World Trade Center. .
Furthermore, Newark and New York determined that none of the Israelis were actively engaged in clandestine intelligence activities in the United States."
[Conspiracy Theories say Israel [sic] did it. By James Cox, USA TODAY, Sep. 28, 2001..
The Muslim world World Trade Center ... A group of five [sic] Jews was arrested shortly following the attacks after being spotted videotaping the crashes on a New York rooftop and [sic] dancing in jubilation... Typical is an editorial in the Syria Times... The grieving father of suspected hijacker Mohamed Atta, interviewed by Egyptian news agency MENA, wondered why U.S. media outlets has chosen to ignore that U.S. authorities seized a number of Jews while they were [sic] dancing [sic] in celebration [sic] of over the incidents." The answer to that question was obvious to Ismail Abu-Shanab, a member of the militants Palestinian group Hamas.]
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