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Arabia
Lawyer Cori Crider, "Sharif Mobley was tortured in Yemeni Prison."
2010-11-13
The simplicity of Yemeni expatriates in New York was the reason why Sharif Mobley and his family went to Yemen in 2008 to study Arabic, said Zenja Mobley, wife of terror suspect Sharif Mobley.
Try the Berlitz course next time ...
"We did not expect that our visit to Yemen would become a living hell after we lived there for two years quietly and in peace."
I would. That's why most people don't go there...
Zenja complained that her husband, now facing the death penalty, was even investigated with at the U.S. Embassy because he was "bearded and was interested in religious affairs".
That's two warning signs for me, sure enough ...
She accuses the U.S. Embassy of ignoring the issue of her husband. She adds that the U.S. Embassy refused to give her a translator when she asked for one.

Mobley's U.S. lawyer, Cori Crider added that U.S. intelligence officers threatened Sharif that they would torture his family as well if he does not specify where Anwar Awlaki, a terror suspect, was. Crider added that investigators told him that he and his family would be raped in Yemeni prisons if he does not cooperate.
More likely the interrogators told him that they would confine him to a cell with his mouthy wife, after which he sang like a canary ...
She added that the reason why Sharif was taken to the hospital was due to his bad health situation after being held in an underground prison, which in result, made his health condition bad.

According to the Crider, after Mobley spent two months in prison, American investigators approached him again, and when they did not find the information they wanted from Sharif, they threatened to treat his family the same way. She claims that Mobley was tortured in prison.

Meanwhile,
...back at the ranch...
his wife claims that she recognized a number of Yemeni officers who searched her house when she went to the embassy and are employed at the U.S. Embassy in Sana'a.

On January 24, 2009, governmental troops wearing masks kidnapped Mobley early on the 24th of last January, in front of Maqaleh Grocery Store in the Asbahi area of the capital Sana'a.

He is now being trialed not on terror charges, but for killing a soldier. Yemeni government has said that there is no proof that Mobley is linked to terrorism.
Posted by:Fred

#6  "Dirka dirka jihad jihad"

how'd I do?
Posted by: Frank G   2010-11-13 17:05  

#5  Mike,
carry on an intelligent conversation, that sort of thing.
In Arabic? Didn't know it was even possible.
Posted by: Glenmore   2010-11-13 16:58  

#4  Pappy, my mother found it helpful to read Chaucer as if it were in modern Dutch instead of Middle English. Her professor praised her pronunciation, and she had no trouble with the vocabulary or grammar. In fairness, though, it must be remarked that her first reading assignment in the English language was Romeo and Juliet, so perhaps her feel for the language was a bit skewed.
Posted by: trailing wife   2010-11-13 13:37  

#3  Chaucer is in English?

:p
Posted by: Pappy   2010-11-13 13:17  

#2  Mr. Wife studied Arabic with a tutor provided by Inlingua, a competitor of Berlitz (in Cincinnati the two companies are within walking distance of one another). While the nice Palestinian university student and the textbook provided was very useful for daily conversation, reading menus and shop signs (Mr. Wife greatly impressed his colleagues in India by reading the Urdu shop signs, written in Arabic), the teaching clearly would not have been adequate for studying the Koran, written in the classical dialect, any more than English as a Second Language classes would prepare one for Shakespear and Chaucer.
Posted by: trailing wife   2010-11-13 11:40  

#1  More likely the interrogators told him that they would confine him to a cell with his mouthy wife, after which he sang like a canary ...

That's a new keyboard you owe me, fella. :)

Also wanted to mention that it ain't hard to learn Arabic here in the states - a young man working for me is a convert to Islam and he speaks it quite well with nothing more than books you can buy at just about any decent bookstore. I've looked at 'em - quite reasonable, they are, teaching you how to learn phrases that will enable you to buy groceries, ask for a doctor, carry on an intelligent conversation, that sort of thing. I'm guessing those Yemeni books were needed to learn that green wire/red wire stuff.

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski   2010-11-13 09:26  

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