Bomb suspect's mother: Tamerlan Tsarnaev's touching call
http://www.latimes.com/news/world/worldnow/la-fg-wn-tsarnaev-mother-20130421,0,6590529.story
April 21, 2013, 4:05 p.m.
MOSCOW -- Tamerlan Tsarnaev, the older of the two brothers suspected in the
Boston Marathon bombings, called his mother Friday morning, hours before
being killed in a shootout with police, and told her he had received a call
from the FBI, she said.
"He would call me every day from America in the last days," Zubeidat
Tsarnaev said Sunday in a telephone interview with The Times from her home
in the Russian republic of Dagestan, "and during our last conversation on
the morning of [the shootout], he was especially touching and tender and
alarmed at the same time," she said. "He said he got a private phone call
from [the FBI] and said that they told him he was under suspicion and should
come see them."
" 'If you need me, you will find me,' he said, and hung up," she said,
beginning to sob. "You know the FBI followed him for several years and when
he got back from Dagestan last year they called him and asked him what was
the purpose of his visit to his homeland."
Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Mich.), a former FBI agent who has not hesitated to
criticize his former employer, said Sunday that the FBI had done "a very
thorough job" of vetting Tamerlan Tsarnaev after the Russian intelligence
service flagged him in early 2011 as a possible Islamic radical. Rogers said
he didn't think the bureau had missed anything significant. [apart from him being a muslim terrorist]
In her remarks, the suspects' mother focused primarily on her older son, but
also mentioned the younger brother, Dzhokhar, who was badly wounded in the
shootout and was captured by police later Friday, hiding in a boat in
suburban Watertown, Mass. He remains hospitalized and in police custody.
"When [Tamerlan] talked to me that last time, Dzhokhar was in his house too,
and he said he would give him a lift home," their mother said. "And then the
next day my daughter Bella called me and said, 'Mama, turn on the
television.' ... Now I live with the television turned on at all times," she
said, crying again.
Zubeidat Tsarnaev said she and her husband are planning to go to the United
States to clear their sons' names. She said her husband's brother "is a
lawyer with a big oil company and he said that he will help us find a good
lawyer for Dzhokhar."
She said that in recent months, Tamerlan had told her on the phone several
times that while he loved and enjoyed America, he wanted to move back to
Dagestan and had persuaded his wife, who is American, to move back with him
and their daughter.
"He wanted to be among his people, among his relatives, close to his
roots," she said, sobbing.
The Tsarnaevs are ethnic Chechens from the former Soviet republic of
Kyrgyzstan. In 1992 they tried to move to their historic homeland of
Chechnya, a restive region of southern Russia, but in 1994 the first war
between Moscow and the regional separatists broke out. The Tsarnaevs moved
back to Kyrgyzstan and from there in 1999 to neighboring Dagestan. In 2002
they immigrated to the United States. The parents returned to Dagestan a
year ago while their sons and two daughters remained in the U.S.
An Islamic militant group in Dagestan issued a statement Sunday distancing
itself from the marathon bombing.
"The Caucasian mujahedin are not fighting against the United States of
America," the group, called the Caucasus Emirate, said in its statement.
"We are at war with Russia, which is not only responsible for the occupation
of the Caucasus, but also for heinous crimes against Muslims."
Experts and rights activists in Moscow agreed that taking the war of terror
across the ocean to the United States doesn't help the cause of Russian
radical Islamists, despite their routine anti-American rhetoric.
"I think we can trust this statement, because attacking the U.S.A. is not in
the interests of North Caucasus insurgents," Tatiana Kasatkina, executive
director of Memorial, a Moscow-based human rights group that monitors events
in the troubled region. "The United States doesn't support Russia in this
regional conflict and more than that, it regularly criticizes the Russian
leadership for violations of human rights in the course of this conflict."
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