Daily News

Parents missed that son was a ticking time bomb

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WASHINGTON: Three years ago, al-Qaeda’s magazine, Inspire, published an article titled, “Make a bomb in the kitchen of your Mom”.

The article explained how to build a pressure-cooker device like the ones that blew up last week at the Boston Marathon. But to make a bomb in your mom’s kitchen, the first thing you need is an inattentiv­e mom.

That’s what Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev had. We don’t yet know where they made the bombs they’re accused of planting. But we do know that their father, Anzor Tsarnaev, and their mother, Zubeidat Tsarnaeva, had plenty of warnings that Tamerlan was becoming dangerous.

Tamerlan was a human pressure cooker loaded with zeal, violence and destructiv­e ideology. His parents, blinded by adoration and excuses, refused to see it.

Most people who met or knew Tamerlan say he was a jerk. His dad, however, insists Tamerlan was “kind” and “very nice”.

Anzor “lost control over that family quite a time ago”, says his brother, Ruslan. In every interview, Anzor claims to know exactly what his kids have been up to, though he hasn’t seen them since he moved back to Dagestan a year ago.

He also claims, falsely, that Tamerlan “was never out of my sight” during the young man’s visit to Dagestan last year.

According to Anzor, Tamerlan was such a boxing stud that “in the US everyone knows he is a celebrity”. When Anzor left Boston, he asked Tamerlan to keep an eye on Dzhokhar. He thinks the elder brother has been keeping the younger one away from bad influences.

Tamerlan’s mother is just as deluded. She swears Tamerlan and Dzhokhar couldn’t be involved in a bomb plot because “my sons would never keep a secret”. Instead of correcting Tamerlan’s conspiracy theories, she swallowed them.

According to one of her spa clients, Zubeidat recently called the 9/11 attacks a US plot to stoke hatred of Muslims. “My son knows all about it,” she allegedly told the client.

Zubeidat also says the FBI has been watching her family constantly for years, which the FBI denies. Last year, she was arrested, but apparently never prosecuted, for shopliftin­g.

Some time between 2007 and 2009, Tamerlan and Zubeidat turned to religion. Zubeidat became observant, but Tamerlan became intolerant and hostile. He pushed his strict views on the rest of the family. When his sister married a non-Muslim, Tamerlan didn’t accept the man. Tamerlan’s uncle, Ruslan, perceived a change in his nephew’s personalit­y. Ruslan says a family friend told him in 2009 that a Muslim convert had “brainwashe­d” Tamerlan.

The tension exploded when Tamerlan, during that period, called Ruslan an “infidel”. Tamerlan also challenged another uncle, Alvi Tsarni, to a fight. Both uncles cut off contact with the Tsarnaevs.

Anzor, unchastene­d even by the marathon bombings, says the uncles don’t really know his kids. “They are just blabbing what they know nothing about,” he said on Friday.

In early 2011, two FBI agents, provoked by an alert from Russian intelligen­ce, came to the Tsarnaevs’s flat to speak to the family about Tamerlan. Zubeidat says the agents said Tamerlan was visiting “extremist sites” and that “they were afraid of him”.

She says Tamerlan answered the agents defiantly: “I am in a country that gives me the right to read whatever I want and watch whatever I want.” Anzor shrugged off the warning: “I knew what he was doing, where he was going. I raised my children right.” Zubeidat says the agents investigat­ed Tamerlan only because “he loved Islam”.

When the bombs exploded, and videos implicated Tamer- lan and Dzhokhar, the uncles acknowledg­ed the evidence, but the parents didn’t.

They didn’t just stammer, as many parents would, that their sons couldn’t have done it. They declared that the young men had been “set up”, and they hurled conspiracy theories at the authoritie­s. “The police are to blame,” said Anzor. “Being cowards, they shot the boy dead.” He denounced the pursuit of his sons by law enforcemen­t as “a provocatio­n of the special services who went after them because my sons are Muslims and don’t have anyone in America to protect them”.

Anzor’s sister, Maret Tsarnaeva, echoed these self-deceptions. “Growing up, within the family, everything was perfect,” she said on Friday. Her nephews had no motive to bomb anyone, she said: “For what beliefs? I don’t know them to have any strong beliefs.” She concluded that “our boys were framed”. When reporters showed her video evidence implicatin­g them, she replied: “The picture was staged.”

Neighbours and congregant­s at Tamerlan’s mosque had warnings, too. Last year, he angrily rebuked a merchant in Cambridge for breaking Islamic law by advertisin­g Thanksgivi­ng turkeys.

At Friday prayers, he disrupted and criticised a sermon that defended the celebratio­n of Thanksgivi­ng and July 4. Two months later, he interrupte­d an imam who suggested that Martin Luther King jr, like the Prophet Muhammad, was worthy of emulation. Tamerlan protested that King was “not a Muslim”, and he called the imam a “kafir”, or non-believer. Some of the congregant­s threatened to expel Tamerlan, but none of them reported him to the authoritie­s, since he hadn’t preached or committed any violence.

You can’t expect witnesses to report every fanatical outburst. But when family members are repeatedly exposed to signs that a loved one is drifting into violent extremism, they have a duty to intervene, or at least to alert someone.

If they don’t, and the fanatic becomes a killer, they bear an awful responsibi­lity.

If they deny responsibi­lity by accusing the police and government of anti-Islamic conspiraci­es, they forfeit sympathy, respect and trust. – Washington Post/ Bloomberg

 ?? PICTURE: ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? DELUDED: The suspects’ mother, Zubeidat Tsarnaeva, is besieged by reporters as she walks near her home in Makhachkal­a, Dagestan, southern Russia, on Tuesday.
PICTURE: ASSOCIATED PRESS DELUDED: The suspects’ mother, Zubeidat Tsarnaeva, is besieged by reporters as she walks near her home in Makhachkal­a, Dagestan, southern Russia, on Tuesday.
 ??  ?? FAMILY PORTRAIT: Baby Tamerlan Tsarnaev, accompanie­d by his father, Anzor, left, mother, Zubeidat, and uncle, Muhamad Suleimanov. The photo is courtesy of the Suleimanov­a family in Makhachkal­a.
FAMILY PORTRAIT: Baby Tamerlan Tsarnaev, accompanie­d by his father, Anzor, left, mother, Zubeidat, and uncle, Muhamad Suleimanov. The photo is courtesy of the Suleimanov­a family in Makhachkal­a.
 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? DAD: Anzor Tsarnaev, father of Boston bomb suspects Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev.
PICTURE: REUTERS DAD: Anzor Tsarnaev, father of Boston bomb suspects Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev.

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