Encyclopedia > Abu Nidal

  Article Content

Abu Nidal

Abu Nidal (1937-2002), born Sabri al-Banna, was a Palestinian terrorist. He was the founder of the Fatah Revolutionary Council (also known as the Abu Nidal Organization), formed after a split between Nidal and the Palestine Liberation Organization in 1974. The name "Abu Nidal" means "father of struggle" in Arabic.

Little is known for certain of his early life. He was born in Jaffa to a family of farmers and following the creation of Israel he grew up in Nablus. He became a school teacher before joining the Ba'ath[?] party and then PLO in 1967.

Abu Nidal and his organization planned and carried out attacks on behalf of several governments including those of Iraq, Libya and Syria. Operations attributed to the Abu Nidal Organization cover over twenty countries and 100 attacks, and include:

It has been claimed that internal purges of his group resulted in over 150 deaths.

On August 19, 2002 he was reported dead of gunshot wounds in his home in Baghdad. He was suffering from leukemia, and the Iraqi government has said he was also facing a charge of treason and was likely to be convicted. The cause of his death according to Iraq's foreign minister Tariq Aziz was a self-inflicted gunshot wound. The London paper Al-Sharq al-Awsat states that there were in fact multiple gunshots and the death was a homicide carried out by Iraqi intelligence agents.

He was essentially mercenary in his activities. Although his ideology included the formation of a Palestinian state containing all of Israel, his targets included not only Israelis but also moderate Palestinians. He was commonly regarded as "the world's most dangerous terrorist" until the rise of Osama bin Laden's Al-Qaeda movement.

The Fatah Revolutionary Council is not the same as the Palestinian organization Fatah.

Books

Abu Nidal, a Gun for Hire, by Patrick Seale: ISBN 0679400664

Other sources

BBC report on Abu Nidal's death: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/2203004.stm



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Flapper

... that accompanied it. Called garconne in French, flapper style made them look young and boyish. The short "bob" haircut became popular, only to be replaced later by the ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 37.1 ms