Boston Bombings Mourned

style="float: right; margin-bottom: 10px; font-weight: 600;"Sat 4th May, 2013

As charges are being prepared by prosecutors and the Boston police are still celebrating their effective action, the city also faces the pain inflicted by the two teenage bombers through a series of memorial services.

The services ranged from memorial service at Boston University to a state-wide moment of silence. A funeral ws held in Medford, the hometown of Krystle Campbell, the 29-year-old restaurant manager who fell victim to the blasts when the homemade pressure cooker bombs exploded near the finish line. While the infamous Westborough Baptist Church announced plans to picket the funeral in a religious context, the escorting police officers were joined by members of several motorcycle gangs to protect the mourners and procession.

Of the two domestic terrorists, the older brother, Tamerlan Tsarnaev (26), was killed in a shootout with the Boston police, while his younger brother Dzhokhar Tsarnaev (19) was captured after a statewide manhunt hiding in a boat in Watertown. The two brothers were raised in the United States and are of Chechen descent, possibly marking a turning point in the failed "War on Terror", which, at least in the United States and Britain, has remained somewhat focused on racial profiling and slowly turned into a quasi-religious conflict.

Dzhokhar was wounded during his capture, but will stand trial in an open civilian court, marking another turn in the War on Terror, where suspects have been routinely moved away from the public eye, to the military courts in Guantanamo Bay. Both suspects have been publicly lambasted by their uncle, who recounted a falling out over the topic of religious extremism.


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