Friday, April 16, 2010

Recogniton Welcome Address

Your Name We'll meet in heaven

say that the love of a woman can do everything ... even to give his life.
The phenomenon of "black widows" or female suicide bombers who blow themselves up in terrorist attacks after their husbands die, become increasingly more common.
A a Chechen teenager who was widowed last year, did not hesitate to set off explosives he was carrying in his body on the Moscow subway, killing 39 innocent people.
The motive was not political, or ideological, much less religious, women simply wanted to avenge the death of her husband.
Djennet Abdurakhmanov, was 17 and the day her husband, the rebel Islamic Oumalat Magomedov, died on December 31 killed by Russian police, she decided to exact revenge at the expense of his life and that nothing of the innocent had to do with either her husband or struggle with their decision.
According to Moscow's secret service, the love story began when the girl two met on the Internet to a member of the rebellion in the Caucasus. At that time the girl was 16 years old, but did not think twice to irs Magomedov live ea.
is believed that the couple married a few months and the police found two photographs of both wielding guns.
She wears a black robe and headscarf from top to bottom. She is hugging her husband, teaching firearms pose challenging.
was apparently Djennet widow when Magomedov was killed in a shootout with police. It is speculated that she was trained and persuaded by Wahhabi ideologues to avenge her husband.
Djennet With another woman identified as Markha Oustarkhanova, also participated in the terrorist attacks on the Moscow Metro.
Oustarkhanova, 20, was married to another Chechen separatist leader, who had been widowed by the same circumstances.
The research finds that the two suicide bombers carried out a coordinated double bombing in the Russian capital to sacrifice themselves. Authorities searched the bodies of those left destroyed in the subway, found next to the few remaining Djennet, a love letter written in Arabic addressed to Oumalat, which ended with the phrase "We'll meet again in heaven."

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