Mufid Abdulqader
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Mufid Abdulqader | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1960 (age 65–66) |
| Occupation | Engineer |
Mufid Abdulqader (Arabic: مفيد عبد القادر) is a former Dallas Public Works and Transportation Department engineer and investor who was sentenced to 20 years in prison[1] for raising funds for the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development.[2] His family claimed his innocence, and demanded his release.[3] Human Rights Watch called on the Biden administration to release the five accused.[4]
Abdulqader was born in 1960 in the village of Silwad which was the under Jordanian control.[5] Abdulqader's half-brother is Khaled Mashal, who later became the leader of Hamas and stepped down as Hamas' politburo chief in 2017.[6] Together with Mashal, Abdulqader's father moved the family to Kuwait for financial reasons. Abdulqader and his half-brother Khaled completed high school there.[7]
Career
Mufid won praise from Dallas Mayor Laura Miller during his tenure as a "rising star" in the Dallas Public Works and Transportation Department, where he worked on street design and sidewalk projects, and led the $4.8 million Bishop Arts District redevelopment in 2001.[8] By September 2003, he was Senior Project Manager.[9] Before Dallas, he worked at the Oklahoma Department of Transportation from 1988 to 1996.[10]
Mufid performed for the band Al Sakhra ("The Rock"). It performed "stridently anti-Semitic" songs[11] on coast-to-coast tours in the United States.[12] In addition to singing, Mufid performed skits on stage.[13] His band was afterwards called Al Nojoum.
Investments
Together with co-worker Mohammad Elyazgi, Abdulqader was a co-owner of Sinbad Greek & International Food in Oklahoma.[14][15][10]