in 1990 on a student visa, subsequently studying at the University of Houston before transferring to MIT where she triple-majored in biology, anthropology, and archaeology, and later receiving her PhD from Brandeis University, as reported in Peter Bergen's book The Longest War: The Enduring Conflict Between America and Al-Qaeda. After wedding anesthesiologist Amjad Mohammed Khan in an arranged marriage, Siddiqui had two sons and a daughter in 1996, 1998 and 2002.
After the 9/11 attacks, Siddiqui insisted to her husband that the family move to Pakistan, and when they did she wanted to move to the country's border with Afghanistan to provide medical aid to Taliban. After becoming increasingly interested in Islam and jihad, Siddiqui began to attract the attention of the FBI when she and her husband bought $10,000 worth of body armour, night-vision goggles and militant manuals such as Fugitive, Advanced Fugitive, The Anarchist's Arsenal and How to Make C-4, according to reports in Harper's, The Guardian and Boston Magazine.
Khan suspected Siddiqui had become involved with extremist groups, and she married suspected militant Ammar al-Baluchi in 2003. When Siddiqui disappeared with her children on what she claimed was a trip to Islamabad, the FBI released a"worldwide alert" for her and Khan, according to the BBC.Army troops and FBI agents. During the questioning, Siddiqui allegedly picked up one of the soldiers' rifles and fired two shots at them. The soldiers successfully disarmed her.
Allah pak karim farma is ban par
پاکستان تازہ ترین خبریں, پاکستان عنوانات
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