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Trayvon and Abdulrahman

OpinionLeroy Seat  |  July 26, 2013

By Leroy Seat

The name Trayvon, sadly, has become a household name in the United States and elsewhere, but many do not know the name Abdulrahman. Both young men were U.S. citizens born in 1995, and both were tragically killed – but in greatly different circumstances.

Trayvon Martin, as everyone knows, was killed at short range in February 2012 by George Zimmerman. Abdulrahman al-Awlaki, as you may not know, was killed at very long range by a U.S. drone.

AbdulrahmanAbdulrahman was born in Denver, Colo., in September 1995, nine months after Trayvon. He was killed in Yemen on Oct. 14, 2011, 10 weeks before the Florida teenager was shot and killed in Sanford, Fla.

The justification of Trayvon’s slaying is questionable, although the jury concluded that under Florida law Zimmerman was not guilty of second-degree murder or manslaughter. The killing of Abdulrahman, though, seems completely unjustified and an unmitigated tragedy.

Abdulrahman’s father, Anwar, was also an American citizen, born in New Mexico in 1971. He was killed by a “Hellfire Missile” fired from a U. S. Predator drone just two weeks before his son.

The father was clearly linked to terrorist activity. There is no evidence at all that the son was.

Details of Abdulrahman’s tragic death are told in Jeremy Scahill’s 2013 book, Dirty Wars: The World Is a Battlefield. The final chapter of that 642-page book is “Paying for the Sins of the Father” and is about Abdulrahman’s annihilation.

On June 28, I attended the opening screening of Scahill’s documentary film with the same name as the book. In it, Scahill interviews Nasser al-Awlaki, Abdulrahman’s grandfather, who is a former Fulbright scholar, university president and Yemeni public servant.

Last week the New York Times ran an article by Grandfather Nasser. It was titled “The Drone That Killed My Grandson.”

Even though Abdulrahman’s father was involved in terrorist activities, he was an American citizen. Nevertheless, he was never charged with a crime and evidence of his criminal wrongdoing was never presented to a court.

He was just put on a kill list and “taken out” by a drone.

We have been in a “war on terrorism” since 2001, and in a war you target and kill your enemies, so most Americans probably support the killing of Abdulrahman’s father.

And most Americans support continuation of the war on terrorism, according to a Fox News poll. Last month after President Obama said that the war on terrorism “must end,” 77 percent of the voters polled said the war on terrorism “should continue to be a top priority to the government.”

But should that mean targeting and killing a 16-year-old American boy? Surely not!

In responding to questions about his killing, Robert Gibbs, a former White House press secretary, said the boy should have had “a more responsible father.”

But maybe we need a more responsible government. And maybe there needs to be more outrage about the killing of Abdulrahman.

Many of us are against profiling and the mistreatment of young African-American men like Trayvon, as we should be.

Why shouldn’t we be even more strongly against the profiling and the killing of a young Yemeni-American man like Abdulrahman?

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OPINION: Views expressed in Baptist News Global columns and commentaries are solely those of the authors.
Tags:CommentariesTerrorismDronesRace
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