Sheikh Abdul Majeed al-Zindani (Other spellings: Abdelmajid al-Zendani, Abdul Majeed Zendani, Abd Al Majid Zandani) (Arabic: عبد المجيد الزنداني ) has been described as "a charismatic Yemeni academic and politician." He is the founder and head of the Iman University in Yemen, head of al-Islah political movement in Yemen, and the founder of the Commission on Scientific Signs in the Quran and Sunnah, based in Saudi Arabia.[1]
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Abdul Majeed al-Zindani was born in 1942 in Yemen. He spent his early college years in Egypt, where he failed to get a degree and was influenced by the Islamic Movements and devoted his life to politics.
Abdul Majeed al-Zindani is the founder and president of the Iman University in Sanaa, Yemen which was founded in 1995.[1]
Al-Zindani is "a leading member" of Yemen's al-Islah Party, (the Yemeni Congregation for Reform).
He approached the Saudi government's largest charity, the Muslim World League, in 1984, to establish a Commission on Scientific Signs in the Quran and Sunnah, based in Saudi Arabia. He headed the Commission until stepping down as secretary general in 1995. Although he no longer has any official role with the Muslim World League, he is still invited to its events.
Abdul-Majid al-Zindani gave a speech praising the quality of scientific and medical research carried out at the Iman University, claiming that they had successfully treated many cases of AIDS.[2] In twenty cases, al-Zandani said that the virus had vanished completely without any side effects and called on the UN, which "spends enormous amounts of money to fight the disease," to send "its senior scientists to review [the university's] findings.” Since the announcement of this cure in 2005, this research has not yet been verified by other scientists.[citation needed]
Dr. Jamil al-Mughales, the head of the Clinical Immunology Services of King Abdul Aziz University, said that if he were the Minister of Health, he would put al-Zindani in jail. “Me and my friends were totally upset about the way he is dealing with the disease,” he said. “I am one of the people who personally saw the blood test of one of the patients, who was told by al-Zindani to have relations with his wife because he is virus-free, but then when I saw the results, he still had HIV,” he said[1].
In July 2008, Abdul-Majid al-Zindani joined a panel of Islamic clerics and prominent tribal chiefs to announce the creation of a new morality authority. The Meeting for Protecting Virtue and Fighting Vice declared its intention to alert Yemen's police force to infringements of Islamic law. The declaration followed reports of vigilante activity by self-appointed 'morality guardians' in Hodeidah, Aden and Sana'a. [3]
In 2006, Zindani pressed charges against 21 newspapers and their editors in Yemen for printing the controversial Muhammad cartoons, originally printed in the Danish newspaper Jyllands-posten in 2005. On November 25, 2006, the first case against the newspaper Al-Rai Al-A'm closed with al-Zidani winning the case and the newspaper was sentenced to cease printing for 6 months and the editor Kamal al-Olufi was sentenced to one year of prison. Furthermore, al-Olufi was ordered to pay for the sentence to be printed in all major newspapers in the world.[citation needed]
On February 24, 2004, the US Treasury Department added Zindani to its list of "banned entities" as a "Specially Designated Global Terrorist". The Department claimed it had credible evidence al-Zindani had a "long history of working with bin Laden, notably serving as one of his spiritual leaders", that he "served as a contact for Ansar al-Islam (Al), a Kurdish-based terrorist organization linked to al-Qaeda", that students of his Al Iman University were suspected of assassinating three American missionaries and "the number two leader for the Yemeni Socialist Party, Jarallah Omar".[4]
His name subsequently appeared on the UN 1267 Committee's list[5] of individuals belonging to or associated with al-Qaeda. Among the factors offered to Guantanamo captive Abdul Rahman Mohamed Saleh Naser's Administrative Review Board, justifying his continued extrajudicial detention were:[6]