Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Paris embassy attack plot" ¶ 1
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Nizar and Trabelsi
Tunisian Nizar Trabelsi, a former professional football player in Germany, planned the attack and was the designated suicide bomber.
Nizar Trabelsi was convicted of trying to destroy public property, illegal arms possession and being a member in a private militia
Nizar ben Abdelaziz Trabelsi (, born 2 July 1970 ) is a Tunisian and former professional football player.
fr: Nizar Trabelsi
nl: Nizar Trabelsi
* Nizar ben Abdelaziz Trabelsi, or Nizar Trabelsi ( born 1970 ), Tunisian footballer and alleged terrorist
Badat returned to the UK in early 2001, but remained in email contact via " Bobu ", his handler ( alleged to be Tunisian footballer Nizar Trabelsi ).

Nizar and former
Rahim Nizar Jaffer (; born December 15, 1971 ) is a former Canadian politician and a former Member of Parliament.

Nizar and was
According the Ismaili version of the events, in the year following the death of the Imam-Caliph al-Mustansir, a qadi ( judge ) by the name of Sa ’ idi travelled from Egypt to Alamut, taking with him Imam Nizar ’ s grandson, who was known as al-Hadi.
The Fatimid Caliphate was ruled by seven leaders, after which a dispute regarding leadership developed between two brothers – Nizar and Mustali – ultimately resulting in the defeat of Nizar and his followers (" Nizari " Ismailis ), many of whom left Egypt for the region of Iran.
It was the 15th Fatimid / Ismaili / Dawoodi Bohra Imam Abu Mansoor Nizar al-Aziz Billah ( d. 386 AH / 996 ) who traced the site of the head of his great-grandfather through the office of his contemporary in Baghdad, in 985.
Al-Mustansir had already designated ( nass ) to his eldest son Nizar as his successor and it was wholeheartedly accepted by most Ismaili circles.
Most Ismailis living within the countries under direct rule of the Fatimids accepted the Imamate of al-Mustali but those who supported Nizar as their Imam were forced to accept the Imamat of al-Mustali, who was duly installed as the 9th Fatimid Caliph in Cairo.
Imam Nizar fled to Alexandria where he had a substantial following, but after an armed struggle was defeated by the armies of his brother al-Afdal.
Imam Nizar was arrested, brought to Cairo and imprisoned till his death.
The supporters of Nizar managed to develop an Ismaili state in Iran and Syria whose founder and main architect was Hasan-i-Sabbah, the subject of my forthcoming book.
Syrian poet Nizar Qabbani addressed less political themes, but was regarded as a cultural icon, and his poems provide the lyrics for many popular songs.
A 24-year-old man named Nizar Nawar was the suicide bomber, who carried out the attack with the aid of a relative.
Second Lieutenant Idan Quris, who was at the time in command of an engineering platoon at the Israeli outpost, and Lieutenant-Colonel Nizar Fares of the Herev Battalion, at the time acting commander of the outpost, said they did not know who killed the boy, and that no one had seen him from the Israeli position.
The safe and easy patronage in royal courts was no longer available but a successful poet such as Nizar Qabbani was able to set up his own publishing house.
Nizar revolted and was defeated in 1095 ; his supporters, led by Hassan-i-Sabah, fled east, where Hassan established the Ismaili community, sometimes erroneously called the Hashshashin, or Assassins.
On 1 January 2009, Nizar Rayan, a top Hamas leader who served as a liaison between the Palestinian organization's political leadership and its military wing, was killed in an Israeli Air Force strike during Operation Cast Lead.
Nasri Maalouf was also a prominent lawyer, with one of his most important ( and mediatized ) cases the one involving the prosecution of Cheikh Nizar Halabi's assassination
Abu Mansur Nizar al-Aziz Billah, commonly al-Aziz ( 955 – 996 ) () was the fifth Caliph of the Fatimids ( 975 – 996 ).
One complication of the selection of al-Musta ‘ li was that his brother Nizar was considered the rightful heir to the throne.

Nizar and .
Organizational chart of Hezbollah, by Ahmad Nizar Hamzeh.
* 1923 – Nizar Qabbani, Syrian diplomat, poet, and publisher ( d. 1998 )
* September 30, Nizar Mahmoud Hasan Aida, 16, of Deir Ammar refugee camp, killed by IDF gunfire to his chest during a peace demonstration at Ayosh Junction.
* Abu Mansoor Nizar al-Aziz Billah, fifth Fatimid Caliph in Egypt, dies and is succeeded by his son Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah.
He and his followers transferred their allegiance to his brother Nizar.
" Nizar Kabbani, perhaps the Arab world's most renowned modern poet, described him as ` the last prophet `, and the scale of popular veneration for him in Egypt, or the wider Arab world, is " arguably greater than that of any other political leader since the prophet Muhammed ," according to author Tarek Osman.
* In July of 2011, the ShiberHur Theatre Company of Palestine presented a new version of In the Penal Colony, adapted by Amir Nizar Zuabi, at London's Young Vic.
Following his expulsion from Egypt over his support for the Ismaili Imam Nizar b. Mustansir, Hasan-i Sabbah found that his co-religionists, the Ismailis, were scattered throughout Iran, with a strong presence in the northern and eastern regions, particularly in Daylaman, Khorasan and Quhistan.
Afdal explained to the public that the deceased Imam and Caliph, al-Mustansir billah, on his deathbed changed his nomination in favour of his younger son al-Mustali and cancelled his earlier nomination of his eldest son Nizar.
Ismailis loyal to Nizar, argued that the first nomination had never been cancelled and that it contradicted the basic principle of the Ismailis, and for the same principle they had not accepted the second nomination of Imam Ja ’ far al-Sadiq, Musa al-Kazim, and had remained faithful to his first nomination in favour of Ismail.

Trabelsi and former
Hatem Trabelsi (, ; born 25 January 1977 in Aryanah, Tunisia ) is a former Tunisian footballer.
* Hatem Trabelsi, former football player for Ajax Amsterdam, Manchester City, and the Tunisian national team

Trabelsi and football
As a footballer, Trabelsi had joined and played both in Fortuna Düsseldorf and Wuppertal football clubs in Germany.
Sabeur Trabelsi () ( born 18 February 1984 ) is a Tunisian football player who plays for Chatham Town.
Trabelsi grew up in Sfax, and started his football career with is home town club Sfaxien, where he initially played as a forward.
Following Tunisia's elimination from the 2006 World Cup after a 1-0 defeat to Ukraine, Trabelsi announced his retirement from international football at the age of 29, with 61 caps and one goal.

0.116 seconds.