The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘I wasn’t able to save my son,’ mother says

She believes his remains were found Monday, the day he would’ve been 4.

- By Joshua Sharpe joshua.sharpe@ajc.com and Ernie Suggs esuggs@ajc.com

Hakima Ramzi believed her husband back in late November when he said he was taking their 3-year-old son to a Clayton County park. But hours passed. Then days. Then months. Then one little lifetime.

Though authoritie­s haven’t yet confirmed it, t he Jonesboro mother believes her son is the young boy whose body was found Monday on a makeshift desert compound in northern New Mexico. She believes it was Abdul-Ghani Wahhaj, who should’ve turned 4 on Monday,

because he was the only child unaccounte­d for Friday when authoritie­s raided the compound, which her husband and other relatives had secretly constructe­d in rural Taos County.

“I wasn’t able to save my son, to save his life,” Ramzi said in a tearful interview Thursday with Channel 2 Action News. “They took my life. They took my life.”

Her 39-year-old husband, Siraj Ibn Wahhaj, faces 11 counts of child cruelty and is accused in court filings of teaching the children on the compound to become school shooters, though further details haven’t emerged. Prosecutor­s made the same allegation­s against the other adults found arrested there — Wahhaj’s brother-in-law Lucas Allen Morton, sisters Hujrah Wahhaj and Subhannah Wahhaj and Jany Leveille.

Siraj Wahhaj’s father said his son was also married to Leveille. Ramzi’s lawyer told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on he believed Siraj Wahhaj practiced polygamy.

Siraj Wahhaj and Leveille declined to enter pleas at an arraignmen­t hearing Wednesday, but the other suspects pleaded not guilty.

Asked about the charges, Ramzi said none of it seemed like her husband. But she said nothing has seemed normal in the man since shortly before he left for the park after speaking about performing a healing ritual on Abdul-Ghani, who had multiple health issues, including brain damage from birth and seizures.

“He acted different,” she said, unsure of what caused the change in her husband. “In 15 years, I never (had) any problem with him (until then).”

She said they were having no issues in their marriage.

Siraj Wahhaj’s father, a well-known New York City imam also named Siraj Wahhaj, said he too is trying to understand what authoritie­s say about his son staying at the compound for months with no electricit­y, no plumbing and hardly any food for the kids, who wore dirty rags. Taos County officials said the group appeared to be Muslim extremists.

“What does that mean?” the elder Wahhaj told reporters in New York on Thursday, where he speaks at the Masjid at-Taqwa mosque. “I need to know the facts. Wherever they lead, we accept it.”

The imam recalled times when he himself had been accused of being radicalize­d. Much of the scrutiny he’s faced came because he served as a character witness for the convicted mastermind of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, Omar Abdel-Rahman. In 1993, the imam told The New York Times that, though some of the suspects had attended his Brooklyn mosque, its mission was peace.

Imam Siraj Wahhaj said he’s been in contact with police since the group disappeare­d and can’t get over how his relatives could thoroughly disconnect from the rest of the family.

“This is surprising, especially in the Muslim faith, because family ties are very important,” he said. “They have cut ties not only with me, but with their brothers and sisters and mothers, the whole community.”

The imam also believes the remains belong to AbdulGhani. He said one of his other grandkids has spoken about the boy being buried on the land.

A positive identifica­tion could take weeks, Kurt Nolte, New Mexico’s chief medical investigat­or, said Thursday, because of the advanced state of decomposit­ion.

Once the identifica­tion happens, Ramzi can bring her boy home, though it won’t be how she intended.

 ?? MORGAN LEE / AP ?? Siraj Ibn Wahhaj (left) sits next to public defense attorney Aleks Kostich in New Mexico on Wednesday. He declined to enter a plea.
MORGAN LEE / AP Siraj Ibn Wahhaj (left) sits next to public defense attorney Aleks Kostich in New Mexico on Wednesday. He declined to enter a plea.
 ?? MARY ALTAFFER / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Well-known New York City Imam Siraj Wahhaj speaks to reporters Thursday about his son, Siraj Ibn Wahhaj, who faces 11 counts of child cruelty and is accused in court filings of teaching children to become school shooters.
MARY ALTAFFER / ASSOCIATED PRESS Well-known New York City Imam Siraj Wahhaj speaks to reporters Thursday about his son, Siraj Ibn Wahhaj, who faces 11 counts of child cruelty and is accused in court filings of teaching children to become school shooters.
 ?? TAOS COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE ?? Eleven hungry children and a youngster’s remains were found in recent days at this filthy compound shielded by old tires, wooden pallets and an earthen wall studded with broken glass.
TAOS COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE Eleven hungry children and a youngster’s remains were found in recent days at this filthy compound shielded by old tires, wooden pallets and an earthen wall studded with broken glass.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Abdul-Ghani Wahhaj had multiple health issues, including brain damage from birth and seizures.
CONTRIBUTE­D Abdul-Ghani Wahhaj had multiple health issues, including brain damage from birth and seizures.

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