Imam, associate killed after leaving N.Y. mosque

spaminator

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Imam, associate killed after leaving N.Y. mosque
Jennifer Peltz, The Associated Press
First posted: Saturday, August 13, 2016 07:51 PM EDT | Updated: Saturday, August 13, 2016 11:47 PM EDT
NEW YORK -- The leader of a New York City mosque and a friend were fatally shot in a brazen daylight attack as they left afternoon prayers Saturday.
Police said Imam Maulama Akonjee, 55, and 64-year-old Thara Uddin were shot in the head as they left the Al-Furqan Jame Masjid mosque in the Ozone Park section of Queens shortly before 2 p.m. Both men were later pronounced dead.
Police said no motive had been established and there was no reason to believe the men were shot because they were Muslim. No suspects were in custody late Saturday.
"There's nothing in the preliminary investigation to indicate that they were targeted because of their faith," said Deputy Inspector Henry Sautner of the New York Police Department.
Sautner said video surveillance showed the victims were approached from behind by a man in a dark polo shirt and shorts who shot them and then fled with the gun still in his hand.
The imam's daughter, Naima Akonjee, said her father and Uddin were close friends who always walked together to the mosque from their homes on the same street.
Members of the Bangladeshi Muslim community served by the mosque said they want the shootings to be treated as a hate crime. More than 100 people attended a rally Saturday night and chanted "We want justice!"
The Council on American-Islamic Relations, an advocacy group, held a news conference near the shooting scene, where Kobir Chowdhury, a leader at another local mosque, said, "Read my lips: This is a hate crime" directed at Islam. "We are peace-loving."
Naima Akonjee said her father didn't "have any problems with anyone."
Sarah Sayeed, a member of Mayor Bill de Blasio's staff, serves as a liaison to Muslim communities. She attended the rally and said, "I understand the fear because I feel it myself. I understand the anger. But it's very important to mount a thorough investigation."
Members of the community had felt animosity lately, with people cursing while passing the mosque, said worshipper Shahin Chowdhury. He said he had advised people to be careful walking around, especially when in traditional clothing.
He called the imam a "wonderful person" with a voice that made his Qur'an readings especially compelling.
Worshipper Millat Uddin said Akonjee had led the mosque for about two years and was a very pious man.
"The community's heart is totally broken," said Uddin, who is not related to Thara Uddin. "It's a great misery. It's a great loss to the community and it's a great loss to the society."
Naima Akonjee, 28, one of the imam's seven children, said she rushed to her parents' home after the shooting.
She said her father used to call her just to check up on whether she had eaten properly. She'd tell him, "Why are you caring about me?"
"And he said, 'If I'm not caring about you, who will?'" she recalled.
Neighbours also described Uddin as a pious and thoughtful man who prayed five times a day and went to the mosque. While at home, they said he would water his garden and one next door.
"A very honest, wise man ... (And) a very helpful guy," said neighbour Mohammed Uddin, who is not a relation of Thara Uddin's.
People gather for a demonstration Saturday, Aug. 13, 2016, near a crime scene after an imam and his friend were fatally shot while walking home from a mosque. Police said 55-year-old Imam Maulama Akonjee and his 64-year-old associate, Tharam Uddin, were shot in the back of the head as they left the Al-Furqan Jame Masjid mosque in the Ozone Park section of Queens. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)

Imam, associate killed after leaving N.Y. mosque | World | News | Toronto Sun
 

Angstrom

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And now some of our cultural members start fighting back. It's just natural.
 

Jinentonix

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The Council on American-Islamic Relations, an advocacy group, held a news conference near the shooting scene, where Kobir Chowdhury, a leader at another local mosque, said, "Read my lips: This is a hate crime" directed at Islam. "We are peace-loving."
CAIR is ANYTHING but peace loving. They are sh*t disturbing scum who are working towards religious hegemony. Hell, if anyone farted within 5 feet of a Muslim, CAIR would be crying about it being a hate crime. Read more about this "peace loving" organization here: CAIR: Islamists Fooling the Establishment :: Middle East Quarterly

So here we have this "peace loving" sh*t stain from CAIR basically crying bigotry without one shred of evidence that it was indeed a hate crime or religiously motivated. Peace loving people usually don't crank up the rhetoric and let fly with unfounded accusations of racism or bigotry. All that does is inflame sh*t. But hey, that's par for the course for CAIR. FBI stats show that at least 20% of "hate crimes" directed towards Muslims are in fact not hate crimes. Some were Muslim on Muslim acts. Some were insurance jobs made to look like a "hate crime" took place, while the rest were just Muslims making sh*t up. In almost every single one of those instances, the "peace loving" pig f*ckers at CAIR blamed "Islamophobia", made a bunch of noise about it and then got REAL quiet when it turned out those "hate crimes" were fake or involved Muslims committing the crimes.

Christ, if this imam was truly a nice guy, someone who behaved like a decent human being, I sure wouldn't be surprised to find CAIR was behind this hit. I find it interesting that the only description of the shooter is "a man wearing a dark polo shirt and shorts". So even though the killer was wearing shorts, there's absolutely no indication as to the person's colour at all? This whole thing makes me suspicious.
 

Angstrom

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If a cultures, goal is to dominate the world, naturally other culture will resist that domination. That's not hate, that's auto defence.
 

spaminator

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Imam, friend killed after leaving N.Y. mosque
Michael Balsamo, The Associated Press
First posted: Saturday, August 13, 2016 07:51 PM EDT | Updated: Sunday, August 14, 2016 09:59 AM EDT
NEW YORK -- The daylight slaying of a mosque leader and his associate set off fear and anguish Sunday among Bangladeshi Muslims in a New York City neighbourhood, with some saying the killings appear to be an anti-Muslim hate crime. But police said there is no evidence so far to support that.
Police hunted for the gunman who killed Imam Maulama Akonjee, 55, and Thara Uddin, 64, near the Al-Furqan Jame Masjid mosque in Queens as they left afternoon prayers Saturday in their traditional religious attire. Both men were shot in the head.
"This was a hate crime. One hundred per cent, there's no doubt about it," said Monir Chowdhury, who worshipped daily with the two men.
He said he had moved to the community because of its large Bangladeshi immigrant population, but in recent months has been harassed by people shouting anti-Muslim epithets.
In one incident, a man called him "Osama" as he walked to the mosque with his 3-year-old son. With the killer still on the loose, Chowdhury decided it would be best to drive to prayer services.
"A lot of neighbours said, 'Hey, don't take your kid with you,'" he said. "People, they just hate us."
Police released a sketch early Sunday of a dark-haired, bearded man wearing glasses. Police said witnesses described the shooter as a man with a medium complexion. A person who lives near the shooting scene showed The Associated Press and other media organizations a video that showed a man walking up behind the imam and his associate, shooting the men in the head and then walking off. Police said they were reviewing the video.
Investigators said they have not established a motive in the attack. On Saturday, Deputy Inspector Henry Sautner said there was "nothing in the preliminary investigation to indicate that they were targeted because of their faith." Akonjee was carrying about $1,000 in cash that was not taken during the shooting, police said. Akonjee's son said it wasn't uncommon for his father to carry that amount of money.
On Sunday, neighbours in the Ozone Park section were skeptical of what police had found so far.
"We're scared now to walk in the street," said Gousuddin Khan, who worships at the mosque. "Every time we get trouble, we get promises from elected officials, but after they finish that, we don't get any kind of justice." Khan said there needs to be more police officers patrolling the area. On Sunday afternoon, several officers were stationed outside the mosque.
Chowdhury said he has felt the mood in the neighbourhood change drastically in the last few months and accused Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump of spreading anti-Muslim rhetoric.
"This neighbourhood is getting crazy because of this election and Trump. He hates Muslims," he said. "I love this neighbourhood and now I'm scared."
Trump's campaign said in a statement that it was "highly irresponsible" to blame a political candidate for the violent attacks.
In a statement Sunday, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, a Democrat, said that "when religious leaders are targeted, we all bear the pain those in Ozone Park feel most personally today."
Bangladesh's State Minister for Foreign Affairs, Mohammed Shahriar Alam, said the shooting was a "cowardly act on peace-loving people." The U.S. Ambassador to Bangladesh, Marcia Bernicat, said Akonjee "stood for peace."
Mashuk Uddin just couldn't believe it was true, shaking as he heard the news that his brother, Thara, a devout Muslim, had been gunned down. He said he was still planning a funeral Sunday evening.
Akonjee's son, Naim Akonjee, 21, said his father first worked as an imam in the Bronx before working at two mosques in Queens and put his family first.
"He always wants peace," he said of his father through tears. "Why did they kill my father?"
Imam, friend killed after leaving N.Y. mosque | World | News | Toronto Sun
 

Murphy

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I wanted to be the first to say that the Lord sometimes works in mysterious ways.
 

Murphy

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Yep. I think we both know that with each passing day, ordinary people are going to take matters into their own hands. Right or wrong, this revenge killing didn't happen by mistake.
 

Murphy

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Ys, right or wrong. Since I cannot pass judgment, only opinion, I leave it at that. I do not have any information about what happened, apart from this article.