/ Stars that died in 2023

Monday, November 14, 2011

John Mosca, American restaurateur (Mosca's), died from prostate cancer he was , 86.


John Mosca (pronounced "Mohsca")was an American restauranteur and owner (and co-founder) of the famed Mosca's, a Louisiana Creole and Italian restaurant located in Avondale, Louisiana, near New Orleans died from prostate cancer he was , 86.

(May 6, 1925 Chicago Heights, Illinois - July 13, 2011, Harahan, Louisiana)

Mosca was born, raised and attended high school in Chicago Heights, Illinois.[1][3] He worked for his parents, Provino and Lisa Mosca, at their local restaurant, which was also named Mosca's.[3]
Mosca enlisted in the United States Army during World War II and served in the European Theater as an infantryman.[1] He was wounded in action by shrapnel during battle in Italy.[3] Mosca was awarded two Purple Hearts and a Bronze Star for his service.[2] He was transferred to the British military forces, who assigned him as a waiter for officers and visiting dignitaries due to his restaurant experience prior to the war.[1][3] He served British Prime Minister Winston Churchill future Yugoslavian President Josip Broz Tito in 1944 when they eat together at the Villa Rivalta in Naples, Italy.[3]
Mosca's parents and brother, Nick, moved to New Orleans during World War II because their daughter, Mary Mosca, had married a New Orleans resident named Vincent Marconi.[3] John Mosca also moved to New Orleans following the end of the war and his honorable discharge from the United States Army.[3]
In 1946, Mosca and his parents opened a new restaurant, called Mosca's, in an Avondale, Louisiana, building that was once a tavern.[1][3] Mosca decided to offer a menu similar to his parents former restaurant in Illinois, specializing in family-style platters.[1][3] However, they decided to include local Louisiana ingredients and cuisine, including seafood, such as oysters and crabs.[3] Among the newer entrees added by Mosca were marinated crab salad, barbecued shrimp and baked oysters.[3] The menu has remained virtually unchanged since the restaurant's founding, as of 2011.[3] Mosca's was destroyed by Hurricane Katrina in 2005, but rebuilt and reopened just ten months later.[1]
Mosca would wake-up at 5 a.m. to shop for ingredients and make the pasta by hand.[3] He worked at Mosca's consistently until approximately a month before his death in 2011.[1]
John Mosca died from prostate cancer at his home in Harahan, Louisiana, on July 13, 2011, at the age 86.[1][3] He was survived by his wife, Mary Jo, and daughter, Lisa Mosca.[1] His wife still runs Mosca's, including the kitchen.[1]

 

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Jerry Ragovoy, American songwriter ("Time Is on My Side"), died from a stroke he was , 80.


Jordan "Jerry" Ragovoy an American songwriter and record producer  died from a stroke he was , 80..

(September 4, 1930 – July 13, 2011)

His best-known composition "Time Is on My Side" (written under the pseudonym of Norman Meade) was made famous by The Rolling Stones, although it had been recorded earlier by Kai Winding and Irma Thomas. Ragovoy also wrote "Stay With Me", which was originally recorded by Lorraine Ellison, and was performed by Mary J. Blige at the 49th Grammy Awards.
An important behind-the-scenes force of East Coast soul music, Ragovoy wrote or co-wrote several classic New York and Philadelphia soul records in the 1960s, often distinguished by a conspicuous gospel feel.[3] The best of these included Garnet Mimms' "Cry Baby," Erma Franklin's "Piece of My Heart," Howard Tate's "Get It While You Can," all later covered by Janis Joplin, plus "Time Is on My Side" and "Stay With Me."[3] Ragovoy also contributed to first-class soul records as a producer and arranger.[3]

Career

Ragovoy was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the son of a Hungarian-born Jewish optometrist.[4] He entered record production in 1953 with "My Girl Awaits Me" by The Castelles.[3]
He worked at Philadelphia's Chancellor Records (where Fabian and Frankie Avalon had hits) and wrote The Majors' vocal group single "A Wonderful Dream," which made #22 in the Billboard Hot 100 in 1962.[3] Around this time he began writing songs with another white soul songwriter-producer, Bert Berns, including "Cry Baby" by Garnet Mimms and The Enchanters, which made #4 in 1963.[3]
Another well-known song by Ragovoy is "Piece of My Heart", co-written with Berns and recorded originally by Erma Franklin, and later famously covered by Janis Joplin with Big Brother and the Holding Company. Between 1966 and 1968, Ragovoy was employed as producer and songwriter for the Warner Bros subsidiary, Loma Records. He also co-wrote several songs in Janis Joplin's solo career, including "Try (Just a Little Bit Harder)" (originally by Lorraine Ellison on Loma Records), "Cry Baby" (originally by Garnet Mimms and The Enchanters, "Get it While You Can" (originally by Howard Tate, covered by Joplin) and "My Baby". Prior to Joplin's death, Ragovoy wrote a song especially for her next album, titled "I'm Gonna Rock My Way to Heaven." The song was never recorded or performed until shortly before Ragovoy's death in July 2011, when it was included in the theatrical production, "One Night with Janis Joplin," written and directed by Randy Johnson with arrangements and musical direction by Len Rhodes. Ragovoy was in attendance on opening night when the show premiered at Portland Center Stage on May 27, 2011.
Ragovoy also produced recorded work by Bonnie Raitt and Milkwood.[3] However, his involvement in the music industry was less prolific from the 1970s onwards.[3]
In 1973, he won a Grammy Award as producer on Best Score From an Original Cast Show Album, for Don't Bother Me, I Can't Cope.
In 2003, Ragovoy worked again with Howard Tate. The pair returned with an acclaimed CD, Howard Tate Rediscovered, written, arranged and produced by Ragovoy.[5]
In 2008, Ace Records released a compilation album entitled, The Jerry Ragovoy Story: Time Is on My Side.
Ragovoy died, following a stroke, on July 13, 2011, at the age of 80.[2]

Notable compositions

Song title
Artist
Others
"About This Thing Called Love"

"Ain't Nobody Home"
"All I Know is The Way I Feel"
"A Wonderful Dream"
The Majors

"Cloudy with a Chance of Tears"

"Cry Baby"
"Eight Days on the Road"
"Either Side of the Same Town"
"Get It While You Can"
"Heart Be Still"

"I Can't Wait Until I See My Baby's Face"
"I'll Make It Up to You"
"I'll Take Good Care of You"

"It's Been Such a Long Way Home"

"It Was Easier to Hurt Her"
"Looking for You"
"Love Makin' Music"

"Morning Light" (co-writer with Don Benoliel)
"Move Me No Mountain"
"My Baby"
"My Girl Awaits Me"

"One Way Love"
"Ring Bell"

"Stop"
"Sure Thing"

"Try (Just a Little Bit Harder)"
"What's It Gonna Be"
"Where Did My Baby Go"

"You Better Believe It"

"You Don't Know Nothing About Love"
"You Got It"

 

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Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Aftab Ahmad Khan, Pakistani military officer, died from a heart attack he was , 87.

Lieutenant-General Aftab Ahmad Khan was a retired Pakistan Army Infantry Officer, born in Batala, Gurdaspur District, British India on Oct. 22, 1923 to the illustrious family of Khan Bahadur Mian Altaf Hussain Khan (1874-1946) and Mehndi Begum died from a heart attack he was , 87..

Biography

Early life, Military Education and honors

After his initial education, at the Municipal Board (MB) High School Batala, Lt. General Aftab Ahmad Khan graduated from the Government College, Lahore, and joined the Indian Military Academy, Dehradun.
During his tenure in the Army, Lieutenant General Aftab Ahmad Khan graduated from Staff College, Quetta - 1952; the United States Army Command and Staff College, at Fort Leavenworth, USA, 1961-62; the Army War Course, Command and Staff College Quetta - 1967; and Royal College of Defence Studies (formerly known the Imperial Defence College), London - 1971.
He was Mentioned in Despatches during the 1965 India-Pakistan War, where he commanded a brigade defending the city of Lahore, Pakistan.
He was a recipient of 2 gallantry awards for his work as Pakistan's Ambassador in Philippines in 1984-86: Rank of Datu in the Order of Sikatuna, Government of Philippines, 8 April, 1986, awarded by Corazon Aquino, President of the Republic of Philippines; and Das Großes Verdienstkreuz der Bundesrepublik Deutschland (Commander's Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany in recognition of his exceptional services to the State and People of Germany, 9 May 1986. Both awards were awarded in recognition of the two respective governments to have facilitated the rescue of two hostages held by the Moro Islamic Liberation Front.

Military Career

He was commissioned in the Indian Army as a 2nd Lieutenant on 21 June 1942 and soon, thereafter, joined the 1st Battalion, 2nd Punjab Regiment in the British Middle East Command.
As a young officer, he served in various regimental appointments for the following two years in Egypt, Palestine, Syria and Lebanon.
In March 1944, his Battalion the 1st Battalion of 2nd Punjab, as part of the 10th Indian Division sailed for Italy and fought against the Germans in World War II as part of the British 8th Army. Major Aftab Ahmad Khan, then a company commander, returned back home in December 1945.
His Battalion joined the 1st Indian Parachute Division where he trained as a paratrooper and became Company Commander.
In 1947, when the Government of India created the Punjab Boundary Force during partition, in the position of Major served in it till it was disbanded.
Having overseen the safe evacuation of hundreds of thousands of Hindus and Sikhs from areas lying between the Sutlej and Ravi rivers to India, and was responsible to safely escort back hundreds of thousands of Muslims stranded in southern eastern Punjab province of India.
In January 1948, he was seconded from the Pakistan Army as a Major to Zhob Militia (formally known as Fort Sandeman), Quetta, Baluchistan part of the Frontier Corps for 3 ½ years and also commanded Pishin Scouts. During this time, he saw action in the state of Jammu and Kashmir.
In 1951, on posting back to the Army, he was posted first as a company commander and then a Brigade Major of an Infantry Brigade in Peshawar.
After attending the Command and Staff College, Quetta in 1952, he took command of the 14th Battalion, 1st Punjab Regiment (Pakistan) for the next 3 years.
In 1956 to 1959, he was posted as General Staff Officer-1 (GSO-I) in Murree serving there for 3 ½ years. He received command of the 1st Battalion, 1st Punjab Regiment in Lahore and paraded the Regiment on its 200th raising day. The parade was commanded by Lt. Col. Aftab Ahmad Khan and led by Field Marshall Sir Claude Auchinleck former Commander-in-Chief. The 1/1 (or commonly known as the first/first) is the senior most Battalion of the Pakistan Army.
Field Marshall M. Ayub Khan at that time the (President of Pakistan) and Commander-in-Chief of the Pakistan Army took the salute at the march past.
After having been posted as Colonel Staff of a Division, Colonel Aftab Ahmad Khan was promoted to command a Brigade and fought in defense of Lahore on the Wagah border, extremely successfully in the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965.
After various staff appointments in General Headquarters, Rawalpindi, including as Vice Chief of General Staff, Director General Military Training, Research and Development, he commanded a division in Chamb Sector in 1972 followed by taking command of a newly raised X Corps with the rank of Lieutenant General from where he retired after 34 years of service.

X Corps (Pakistan)

.
As an ode to the Lt.General Aftab Ahmad Khan for raising the X Corps (Pakistan), the Pakistan Army selected the insignia of the Corps reflecting a Rising Sun (Urdu for Aftab) with ten rays extruding from it.
Military offices
Preceded by
Post created
Commander X Corps (Pakistan)
1974 – 1976
Succeeded by
Lt. Gen. Faiz Ali Chishti
Preceded by
GOC 23rd Infantry Division
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Posted created
DG Military Training, Research & Development
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Vice Chief of General Staff
Succeeded by

Post Military Career

After retirement, Lt. Gen. Aftab Ahmad Khan was sent as Ambassador of Pakistan to Libya between 1976 to 1980 and later appointed as Ambassador of Pakistan to the Philippines 1984-1986.
Diplomatic posts
Ambassador of Pakistan
Libya
1976 - 1980
Succeeded by
??
Preceded by
??
Ambassador of Pakistan
Philippines
1984 - 1986
Succeeded by
??

Family

Lt. General Aftab Ahmad Khan was married to Nasreen Hayat Khan in 1960 and had a daughter Umbereen A. Khan and a son Shahbaz A. Khan.
Mrs. Nasreen Aftab Khan died of a protracted illness in 2001.
He had an elder brother Professor Namdar Khan (late - died 2002), a renowned educationalist, who taught Comparative Education at University of California's School of Education (Tollman Hall) from 1972 to 1976,a younger brother Air Marshall Iftikhar Ahmad Khan, (HI)M & (SBt) Sitara-e-Basalat and two sisters Mrs. Ismat Akhtar and Mrs. Najma Chaudhury.

Death

Lt. General Aftab Ahmad Khan died of a sudden Heart Attack on July 12, 2011 at the age of 88, and was laid to rest with Pakistan Army's traditional Military Honors for retired commanders.
He is survived by his daughter Umbereen Fahim Inaam and son Shahbaz Aftab Khan and three grandchildren, Syeda Sharmeen Inaam, Aly Shahbaz Khan and Kamila Shahbaz Khan.

 

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William Crozier, Irish artist died he was , 81.

William Crozier was an Irish-Scots still-life and landscape artist based in Hampshire, England and West Cork in Ireland died he was , 81. He was a member of Aosdana. 

 (5 May 1930 – 12 July 2011)




Life and works

Crozier was born in Glasgow to Irish parents and educated at the Glasgow School of Art between 1949 and 1953. On graduating he spent time in Paris and Dublin before settling in London where he quickly gained a reputation as the 1950s equivalent of a Young British Artist through the early success and notoriety of his exhibitions of assemblages and paintings at the ICA, Drian and the Arthur Tooth galleries, with whom he had a long association.[1]
Profoundly affected by post-war existential philosophy, Crozier allied himself and his work consciously with contemporary European art throughout the 1950s and 1960s, rather than with the New York abstractionists, who were more fashionable in the UK at the time. He was also part of the artistic and literary world of 1950s Soho, a close associate of ‘the Roberts’, Colquhoun and MacBryde, John Minton and William Scott, and part of the expatriate middle-European and Irish intellectual circles in London of the time. Crozier spent 1963 in southern Spain with the Irish poet Anthony Cronin; this proved pivotal to Crozier's development as an artist. On his return to the UK, he began a series of skeletal paintings which anticipated the ‘New Expressionist’ German painters of the 1980s, and which were influenced by Crozier's visits to Auschwitz and Belsen
Based in London throughout the 1960s and 1970s, Crozier exhibited his works in London, Glasgow, Dublin and all over Europe. As many artists of the 1960s did, Crozier combined painting with teaching, first at Bath Academy of Art, (with Howard Hodgkin, Gillian Ayres and Terry Frost), then at the Central School of Art (with William Turnbull and Cecil Collins), at the Studio School in New York and finally at Winchester School of Art where he led a strong centre for painting based on the European tradition. When he ceased teaching in the 1980s, Crozier’s painting blossomed with a new freedom and confidence. His abstract landscapes and still life painting useD sumptuous colour to convey an emotional intensity and he was endlessly concerned with the challenge of creating a new language in figurative painting.
Crozier’s paintings are now in demand at exhibition and at auction. He represented the UK and Ireland overseas, and has been awarded the Premio Lissone in Milan and the Oireachtas Gold medal for Painting in Dublin in 1994. In 1991 the Crawford Art Gallery Cork and the Royal Hibernian Academy curated a retrospective of his work. He was elected to Aosdana in 1992 and is an honorary member of the Royal Hibernian Academy. In 2005 Crozier celebrated his 75th birthday with a major exhibition in Cork to celebrate the European Capital of Culture. Here Crozier exhibited a selection of his drawing work, providing the first opportunity to see that the master of colour was also an inventive artist in black and white.
He died peacefully aged 81 at home on 12 July 2011. His funeral service is to be held in Wickham on 19 July 2011.[2]

Films

Several films have been made about Crozier and his work, such as Gordon Smith’s ‘William Crozier’ for Scottish TV (1970) and ‘The Truth About a Painter’ directed by Cian O hEigertaigh for RTÉ (1993). Crozier himself made films: ‘’Charlston’ and ‘Meon Shore’ for Meridian TV UK in 1996, and later ‘The Frame: Jane Bown photographs William Crozier’, also for Meridian in 2000. Crozier contributed his hostile view of Dalí's painting "Christ of Saint John of the Cross" to an episode of the BBC documentary series, The Private Life of a Masterpiece, which analysed the painting in 2005.

Exhibitions

Examples of the artist’s work can be seen in most major public and private collections in the British Isles, and in the National Galleries of Canada, Poland and Australia among many other national collections. He is strongly represented in the corporate collections of Allied Irish Banks, BNP Paribas and British Petroleum Plc. William Crozier’s work features in all current reference works on 20th century Irish and Scottish Art.
Work by Crozier can be seen in the following public collections: City Art Gallery (Aberdeen), Peter Styvesant Collection, The Ulster Museum, City Art Gallery (Birmingham), The European Commission (Brussels), Museum of Modern Art (Copenhagen), Crawford Municipal Gallery (Cork), Museum of Modern Art (Dallas), Irish Museum of Modern Art (Dublin), Royal Hibernian Academy (Dublin), Office of Public Works (Dublin), Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art (Edinburgh), City Art Gallery (Gdansk), Victoria & Albert Museum (London), National Gallery of Australia (Melbourne), National Gallery of Canada (Ottawa), and the National Museum (Warsaw).

Work in Collections

Bibliography

 

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Howard Hilton, American baseball player (St. Louis Cardinals) died he was , 47.

Howard James Hilton was a Major League Baseball pitcher who appeared in two games with the St. Louis Cardinals at the start of the 1990 season died he was , 47..

(January 3, 1964 – July 12, 2011)

Hilton was born in Oxnard, California, and graduated from Hueneme High School in 1982. He played college baseball for Oxnard College before transferring to the University of Arkansas, and helping pitch the Arkansas Razorbacks,[1] to the 1985 College World Series. Hilton was the starting pitcher in the fourth game in which his team was eliminated in extra innings.[2]
The Cardinals drafted him in the 22nd round of the 1985 Major League Baseball Draft. After five seasons in the Cardinals' farm system, in which he went 33-30 with a 2.97 earned run average, Hilton made the team out of Spring training in 1990. During that Spring, he was involved in trade rumors that would have sent him to the Boston Red Sox for closer Lee Smith, but nothing ever materialized (a deal for Smith was eventually reached after the start of the season for Tom Brunansky).
He made his major league debut in the Cards' season opener, pitching 1.1 innings without giving up an earned run against the Montreal Expos.[3] He entered the final game of the three game series with the Expos with one out in the eighth, and finished the game.[4] It turned out to be his final major league appearance before he was optioned back to the triple A Louisville Redbirds.
Hilton was released during Spring training in 1991, and joined the San Diego Padres' organization. He remained with them through 1992.
Hilton died on July 12, 2011 at Ventura County Medical Center in Ventura, California. No cause of death was given.[5]

 

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Ahmed Wali Karzai, Afghan politician, brother of President Hamid Karzai, died from a gun shot he was , 50.

Ahmed Wali Karzai (Pashto: احمد ولي کرزی, Amad Walī Karzay, )was a prominent politician in Afghanistan and the younger paternal half-brother[2] of Afghan President Hamid Karzai and son of Abdul Ahad Karzai died from a gun shot he was , 50.. As an elder of the Popalzai Pashtun tribe, he was elected to the Kandahar Provincial Council in 2005 and served as its chairman.[3][4] Karzai formerly lived in the U.S. city of Chicago, Illinois, where he worked in a restaurant owned by his family.[5] He returned to Afghanistan following the removal of the Taliban government in late 2001. He was shot and killed by one of his bodyguards on July 12, 2011.



(1961 – 12 July 2011)

Early life and political career

Karzai was born in 1961 in the village of Karz, located in the Dand district[7] of Kandahar in Afghanistan.[1] He is the son of Abdul Ahad Karzai and brother of Afghan President Hamid Karzai, Mahmud Karzai and Quayum Karzai. He attended Habibia High School in Kabul but was not able to finish his studies due to the Soviet war in Afghanistan. He migrated to neighbouring Pakistan and then went to the United States where lived for about ten years. He married there and has two sons and three daughters.[8]
He came to political prominence in Afghanistan following the US occupation of the country in 2001, where he was a key ally of the US military in the country's south.[9] He was elected to the Kandahar Provincial Council in 2005 and exercised influence in the province to the extent that he was described as "effectively the governor".[10] At the time of his death, he was the Council's chairman.[11]
A few days before his death, Ahmed Wali Karzai appeared on a British television programme, "Afghanistan: The Unknown Country," presented by Lyse Doucet, at his home in Kandahar, talking about public perceptions of him.[12] Doucet said: "Like most strong men, he depended on family and fellow tribesmen to protect him." He was drug dealer accordance of many Afghan villagers.

Allegations of corruption

A June 2009 U.S. embassy cable alleged that much of the actual business of running the Afghan city of Kandahar "takes place out of public sight, where Ahmed Wali Karzai operates, parallel to formal government structures, through a network of political clans that use state institutions to protect and enable licit and illicit enterprises." [13] In addition, James Risen of the New York Times and others[14] stated that Ahmed Wali Karzai may have been involved in the Afghan drug trade, which was denied by Karzai, who called the charges political propaganda and stated, "I am not a drug dealer, I never was and I never will be, ... I am a victim of vicious politics."[15]
In meetings with Afghan President Hamid Karzai, including a 2006 session with former US Ambassador to Afghanistan, Ronald E. Neumann, the CIA's station chief and their British counterparts, American officials talked about the rumors in hopes that the president might move his brother out of the country, said several people who took part in or were briefed on the talks. "We thought the concern expressed to Karzai might be enough to get him out of there," one official said. President Karzai has resisted, however, demanding clear-cut evidence of wrongdoing, several officials said. "We don't have the kind of hard, direct evidence that you could take to get a criminal indictment," a White House official said.[15] Ahmed Wali Karzai dismissed the allegations as politically motivated attacks by longtime rival groups in his country.
Before the 2009 Afghan presidential election, Wali Karzai and Sher Mohammad Akhundzada, former governor of the Helmand Province and a member of the Upper House of the Afghan parliament, were accused of vote rigging.[16] After the election, reports mentioned that all those running in the election were involved in electoral fraud.

CIA connections

In October 2009 the New York Times reported that Ahmed Wali Karzai received payments from the CIA for "a variety of services", including the recruitment of the Kandahar Strike Force, an Afghan paramilitary force run by the CIA in the Kandahar region. It also stated that he was paid for allowing the CIA and U.S. special forces to rent the former residence of Taliban supreme leader Mullah Omar.[17] However, Karzai has denied taking any payment from the CIA.[18] U.S. Senator John Kerry and former Afghan Ambassador to the United States, Said Tayeb Jawad, defended Karzai in recent years, Kerry saying "We should not condemn Ahmed Wali Karzai or damage our critical relations with his brother, President Karzai, on the basis of newspaper articles or rumors."[19][20] and Jawad saying, "There is presence of the intelligence, there's presence of many institutions of the United States and NATO countries in Afghanistan, why don't they come up with a clear evidence of any corruption involving the president or his family?[21][22]

Assassination



Karzai survived a number of assassination attempts by Taliban militants[23] and at least two attacks against his office in Kandahar: one in November 2008[24] and the other in April 2009.[25] According to Karzai himself, he had survived a total of nine assassination attempts.[26]
On 12 July 2011, Karzai was assassinated by his long-time head of security, Sardar Mohammad. Reports say that Wali was shot twice with a pistol, once in the head and once in the chest, as he was coming out of the bathroom inside his residence.[27] Abdul Raziq, a top official from the Afghan National Police at Kandahar, stated that the assailant Sardar Mohammad was well known by the Karzai family.[7] He had served as Wali Karzai's most trusted security guard for the last seven years. "As he entered Wali's room, Wali came out of his bathroom. Mohammad fired twice at Wali without any conversation passing between the two. Wali received one bullet in the chest and second in the head," Abdul Raziq said.[7] The assailant was immediately killed by other bodyguards and then his body was hanged at a city square on public view.[28] In the meantime, Karzai's body was taken to Mirwais Hospital in Kandahar.[29]
Thousands of people turned up for his funeral the next day, led by Afghan President Hamid Karzai, and many more waited in buses where his body lay to be taken to his hometown of Karz. Security was tightened around the funeral procession and some reports indicated Hamid Karzai's elite security team were deployed to secure Kandahar, where the funeral was held.[30] At the funeral procession Hamid Karzai issued a message to the Taliban:
"My message for [the Taliban] is that my countryman, my brother, stop killing your own people. It's easy to kill and everyone can do it, but the real man is the one who can save people's lives."[31]
Hamid Karzai's spokesman Waheed Omer said that "We know we live in a dangerous country. We know that security has to be tight all the time and the president knows [this]. He's got good security and that is not a worry for the president. The president is upset, he is still in grief, about the death of his brother. Wali was a very close brother of the president."[32] En route to the funeral Helmand Governor Gulab Mangal escaped an assassination attempt, while later in the evening two more blasts went off in Kandahar. Though Hamid Karzai led the funeral procession, he was not present at a memorial service which was attacked by a suicide bomber killing the senior cleric of the mosque Hikmatullah Hikmat, the head of the Provincial Ulema Council, who died along with three others while 13 others were also wounded.[33]
Reactions
President Hamid Karzai issued a statement on the day his brother died saying: "My younger brother was martyred in his house today. This is the life of all Afghan people, I hope these miseries which every Afghan family faces will one day end"[6] Afghan families, every one of us, have suffered from it, and we hope, God willing, for our suffering to be over.[32] US General David Petraeus [34] as well as other top NATO personnel serving in Afghanistan, officials at the White House and many world leaders condemned the assassination.[27]
Taliban spokesman Qari Yousef Ahmadi claimed that one of their agents was behind the assassination saying, "Today in Kandahar city, Hamid Karzai's brother was killed during the Operation al-Badr... We hired a person by the name of Sadar Mohammad, who was hired for this job for some time now. Ahmed Wali Karzai was punished for all his wrongdoings."[6]
However, according to The Christian Science Monitor, the Taliban has "a dubious record of claiming responsibility for attacks it had nothing to do with",[35] and its claim has been denied by several sources. Abdul Ghafar Sayedzada, head of the counter-terrorism department at the Interior Ministry, told Reuters that "It appears Ahmed Wali Karzai has been killed by one of his bodyguard, and there was nobody from outside involved."[6] The news was confirmed by Zalmai Ayubi, the spokesman for Kandahar province, as well as by Sediq Sediqqi, a spokesman for the Ministry of Interior. Following the killing police were mobilised in Kandahar and helicopters were seen overhead as checkpoints were locked down leading towards the hospital his body was taken to.[36]
Investigation into the murder
Investigators believe that Sardar Mohammad may have been a Taliban sleeper agent or a government defector. Mahmud Karzai, Karzai's other brother, stated that Sardar Mohammad traveled to the Pakistani city of Quetta within the past three months to meet with the Shura Council of the Taliban. Mahmoud Karzai claimed that he has been acting very erratically in recent weeks, including sleeping poorly, moving from house to house during nights, acting suspiciously toward his men and demanding to know who they were talking to on their mobile phones. It suggests that he may have been using narcotics since the area is well known for opium production.[37]

 

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Dickey Betts died he was 80

Early Career Forrest Richard Betts was also known as Dickey Betts Betts collaborated with  Duane Allman , introducing melodic twin guitar ha...