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Trump honours fallen Pak-American Capt Humayun

By APP
December 27, 2018

NEW YORK::US President Donald Trump has signed a bill to honour fallen Muslim US Army Captain Humayun Khan, despite long-running fights with his father, a Pakistani-American lawyer, according to American media reports.

The bill, filed by Congressman Tom Garrett in July 2017, renames a post office in Charlottesville, a city in the US state of Virginia, after Humayun Khan, who was killed in Iraq in 2004 when a vehicle packed with explosives drove into his compound.

Humanyun Khan, who was posthumously awarded a Purple Heart and Bronze Star, was 27 at the time. Captain Khan is revered not only in Charlottesville, but across the nation, Virginia Senators Mark Warner and Tim Kaine said in a statement to The Daily Progress. Humayun Khan's parents, Khizr Khan and Ghazala Khan, were thrust into the spotlight when they appeared at the 2016 Democratic National Convention to criticise then-candidate Trump's Muslim ban proposal.

There comes a time in the history of a nation when an ethical, moral stand has to be taken, regardless of the political response, Khizr Khan said.

Trump lashed out after the DNC speech and accused Khizr Khan of not letting his wife speak, which many claimed played into negative stereotypes about Muslims. "I was viciously attacked by Mr. Khan at the Democratic Convention. Am I not allowed to respond? Hillary voted for the Iraq war, not me!" he tweeted days later. Republican leadership took sides in the feud, with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and then-Speaker Paul Ryan defending the Khans and Mike Pence defending Trump's proposed ban.

The late Republican senator John McCain also issued a lengthy statement in which he insisted that Trump did not speak for the Republican Party at a time when some were already questioning whether he would revoke his endorsement of the future President. The renaming ceremony for the post office is scheduled for next month.