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Egypt's firebrand 'blind sheikh' dies in US prison
Omar Abdel-Rahman, an icon for the Egyptian Salafi-jihadi movement, has died in a US prison while serving a life-sentence on conspiracy charges connected to the 1993 World Trade Centre bombing.
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A radical Egyptian preacher has died in a US prison while serving a sentence for his involvement in the 1993 World Trade Centre bombing in New York.
Omar Abdel-Rahman died aged-78, part way through a life sentence. For decades he had been a figurehead for Egypt's Salafi-jihadi movement, including the militant group al-Gamaa al-Islamiya.
Known as the "Blind Sheikh", Abdel-Rahman was a fiery and charismatic speaker who called for the murder of perceived opponents and the establishment of an Islamic state in Egypt.
He and his followers were linked to a string of attacks across the world.
Abdel-Rahman reportedly issued a fatwa against the secular Egyptian writer Farag Fouda who was later murdered.
He also was said to have issued a fatwa against former Egyptian President Anwar Sadat who was assassinated in 1981.
The cleric was arrested and tortured in Egyptian prisons, before eventually fleeing the country and entering the US on a tourist visa.
Omar Abdel-Rahman died aged-78, part way through a life sentence. For decades he had been a figurehead for Egypt's Salafi-jihadi movement, including the militant group al-Gamaa al-Islamiya.
Known as the "Blind Sheikh", Abdel-Rahman was a fiery and charismatic speaker who called for the murder of perceived opponents and the establishment of an Islamic state in Egypt.
He and his followers were linked to a string of attacks across the world.
Abdel-Rahman reportedly issued a fatwa against the secular Egyptian writer Farag Fouda who was later murdered.
He also was said to have issued a fatwa against former Egyptian President Anwar Sadat who was assassinated in 1981.
The cleric was arrested and tortured in Egyptian prisons, before eventually fleeing the country and entering the US on a tourist visa.
He settled in New York where he attracted a significant following enamoured to his fundamentalist message and firebrand sermons.
Even in the Middle East, tapes of his talks were secretly shared among supporters, where he spoke repeatedly against Israel and the Egyptian government.
The latter country witnessed an upsurge in violence against tourists, security forces and non-Muslims during the 1990s.
He was due to be deported when he was linked to the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Centre in New York and sentenced to life in prison.
Even in the Middle East, tapes of his talks were secretly shared among supporters, where he spoke repeatedly against Israel and the Egyptian government.
The latter country witnessed an upsurge in violence against tourists, security forces and non-Muslims during the 1990s.
He was due to be deported when he was linked to the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Centre in New York and sentenced to life in prison.