May Zarqawi get 72 leper hogs in hell...
Thai widow mourns husband Zarqawi killed
Bangkok Post
One Thai was especially relieved at the death of Jordanian terrorist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in Iraq.
Sombat Bigley, the wife of the former British murder victim Ken Bigley, beheaded by Zarqawi told British reporters:
"He's dead, he's dead, it's good. I'm happy."
Mrs Sombat had to live through a month-long nightmare after her husband left their Northeast farm to work in Iraq, in order to make some money for the home. Bigley was finally beheaded, an act shown in a video that Zarqawi and supporters showed on the Internet.
"I am still very angry and cannot forgive those who killed my husband," Mrs Sombat told the UK media. "I feel very hurt for Ken losing his life. I hope my husband saw him die, I hope my husband is happy that the man who killed him is dead."
Mrs Sombat said Zarqawi's death would not help her come to terms with the murder of her husband. "I miss him so much," she said. "I want to get Ken's body back so that I can put this behind me."
Though the lawyer of a suspected al-Qaida militant claimed earlier this year that the body was buried in a ditch at the entrance to Fallujah, it has apparently not been found.
Zarqawi was personally involved in Mr Bigley's beheading, two weeks after he was taken hostage along with his American colleagues Jack Hensley, 48, and Eugene Armstrong, 52, in September, 2004. The images of Mr Bigley being held in a tiny cage before his death remain a source of torment to his family.
His brother, Stan, said he believed the body would never be found.
"I'm glad [Zarqawi] is off the face of the earth," he said, "not just for my brother but for all the people he has killed."
The British media quoted Stan Bigley as saying:
"Ken was just one of a multitude of innocent people killed by that man. He was a monster. Personally, I would rather have seen him captured and made to stand in the dock and face justice for what he's done. If that had happened, I would like to have seen him locked up for life rather than given the death penalty. The death penalty is too quick for someone like him. He should have been made to live out his life behind bars. I won't lose any sleep over him being dead. I'm not worried that he's gone." (Compiled by Bangklokpost.com)
Thai widow mourns husband Zarqawi killed
Bangkok Post
One Thai was especially relieved at the death of Jordanian terrorist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in Iraq.
Sombat Bigley, the wife of the former British murder victim Ken Bigley, beheaded by Zarqawi told British reporters:
"He's dead, he's dead, it's good. I'm happy."
Mrs Sombat had to live through a month-long nightmare after her husband left their Northeast farm to work in Iraq, in order to make some money for the home. Bigley was finally beheaded, an act shown in a video that Zarqawi and supporters showed on the Internet.
"I am still very angry and cannot forgive those who killed my husband," Mrs Sombat told the UK media. "I feel very hurt for Ken losing his life. I hope my husband saw him die, I hope my husband is happy that the man who killed him is dead."
Mrs Sombat said Zarqawi's death would not help her come to terms with the murder of her husband. "I miss him so much," she said. "I want to get Ken's body back so that I can put this behind me."
Though the lawyer of a suspected al-Qaida militant claimed earlier this year that the body was buried in a ditch at the entrance to Fallujah, it has apparently not been found.
Zarqawi was personally involved in Mr Bigley's beheading, two weeks after he was taken hostage along with his American colleagues Jack Hensley, 48, and Eugene Armstrong, 52, in September, 2004. The images of Mr Bigley being held in a tiny cage before his death remain a source of torment to his family.
His brother, Stan, said he believed the body would never be found.
"I'm glad [Zarqawi] is off the face of the earth," he said, "not just for my brother but for all the people he has killed."
The British media quoted Stan Bigley as saying:
"Ken was just one of a multitude of innocent people killed by that man. He was a monster. Personally, I would rather have seen him captured and made to stand in the dock and face justice for what he's done. If that had happened, I would like to have seen him locked up for life rather than given the death penalty. The death penalty is too quick for someone like him. He should have been made to live out his life behind bars. I won't lose any sleep over him being dead. I'm not worried that he's gone." (Compiled by Bangklokpost.com)
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