Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Donald Trump’s Senior Adviser Uses Fictitious Incident To Justify Travel Ban

Darpan News Desk IANS, 03 Feb, 2017 12:12 PM
    Kellyanne Conway, President Trump's adviser, who made an assertion to defend the White House's refugee ban that appeared to be factually indefensible was on Friday pushed back on her claim.
     
    Appearing on MSNBC's Hardball TV programme on Thursday night, Conway referred to the "Bowling Green massacre" in Kentucky as part of her attempt to justify Trump's temporary restrictions on refugees and nationals from seven Muslim-majority countries.
     
    At one point, Conway made a reference to two Iraqi refugees whom she described as the masterminds behind "the Bowling Green massacre". She was mocked over her statements about a massacre that never happened.
     
    "I bet it's brand new information to people that President Obama had a six-month ban on the Iraqi refugee programme after two Iraqis came here to this country, were radicalized and they were the masterminds behind the Bowling Green massacre," she said during the interview. 
     
     
    "Most people don't know that because it didn't get covered."
     
    No terrorist attack had taken place at Bowling Green, though a Washington Post report said that Conway was referring to two Iraqi refugees Mohanad Shareef Hammadi and Waad Ramadan Alwan who were arrested in 2011 for trying to send money and weapons to Al Qaeda in Iraq for the purpose of killing US soldiers. 
     
    The men had been living in Bowling Green and after their arrest it emerged they had taken part in terrorist activities in Iraq, not the US, according to the report.
     
    Conway later backpedalled her statements, clarifying in a tweet on Friday that she meant to say "Bowling Green terrorists" instead. 
     
    She has previously said that White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer was using "alternative facts", when falsely claiming President Trump's inaugural crowds were "the largest audience" to witness an inauguration.
     
    Twitter users were quick to jump on Conway's new "alternative" fact.
     
    "Here are the names of all those who lost their lives at the Bowling Green Massacre: Kellyann Conway's career.. Let us give thanks," tweeted one user.
     
     
    Another tweet read, "I heard the sattackers in the Bowling Green Massacre were radicalised by a movie where Sinbad played an Arab cleric with magical powers."
     
    "Maybe Kellyanne is from an alternative timeline where all of this did in fact happen and she's trying frantically to return," said another user.
     
    Conway's interview was by no means the first time the arrests of the two Iraqis in Bowling Green have been politicised as support for blocking refugees from reaching the US, reported the Post. 
     
    In December 2015, Senator Rand Paul released a dramatic campaign video ad featuring images and video footage of the two Iraqi nationals, while criticising then-rivals in the presidential race Senator Ted Cruz and Senator Marco Rubio. 
     
    In the 90-second ad, the faces of Waad Ramadan Alwan and Mohanad Shareef Hammadi are featured with pounding, dismal music, establishing that the men were "welcomed into America, given public housing and public assistance -- as refugees."

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Punjab's Dalit Teen Singer Ginni Mahi Wants To Help Dalits Get Their Rights

    Punjab's Dalit Teen Singer Ginni Mahi Wants To Help Dalits Get Their Rights
      At 17, Punjabi singer Ginni Mahi has a YouTube following of over one lakh followers. She says she wants to be the voice of the Dalit caste and help them get their due rights.

    Punjab's Dalit Teen Singer Ginni Mahi Wants To Help Dalits Get Their Rights

    White House War: Sex, Sleaze, Emails, And Putin

    White House War: Sex, Sleaze, Emails, And Putin
    Donald Trump is toast, proclaimed the pundits for the umpteenth time since he began his dizzying presidential run as an "explosive video" hit the airwaves to send his campaign into a tailspin.

    White House War: Sex, Sleaze, Emails, And Putin

    U.S., Canada Ban Samsung Galaxy Note 7 Smartphones From Airliners

    U.S., Canada Ban Samsung Galaxy Note 7 Smartphones From Airliners
     Passengers and flight crews will be banned from bringing Samsung Galaxy Note 7 smartphones on airline flights under emergency orders issued Friday by both Transport Canada and the U.S. Department of Transportation in response to reports of the phones catching fire.

    U.S., Canada Ban Samsung Galaxy Note 7 Smartphones From Airliners

    Surrey Teenage Boy Killed As Tree Topples During High Winds

    Surrey Teenage Boy Killed As Tree Topples During High Winds
    RCMP say an ambulance and the fire department were called to a park Friday afternoon.

    Surrey Teenage Boy Killed As Tree Topples During High Winds

    She Wanted To Be The 'Fun Weekend Mom.' Now, Her Son's Dead

    She Wanted To Be The 'Fun Weekend Mom.' Now, Her Son's Dead
    While Andrew Frye lay dying on the floor of a Super 8 motel room in Green, Ohio, in April, a party raged around him.

    She Wanted To Be The 'Fun Weekend Mom.' Now, Her Son's Dead

    On Trial: A Promising Start To Tinder Date Ended In Plunge To Death From Balcony

    On Trial: A Promising Start To Tinder Date Ended In Plunge To Death From Balcony
    Like so many flings in the summer of 2014, the night Gable Tostee and Warriena Wright spent together began with a flirtatious exchange on Tinder. Their brief relationship would end not with fond memories, but in a death and accusations of murder.

    On Trial: A Promising Start To Tinder Date Ended In Plunge To Death From Balcony