Bloxman Nusair Bin Fadi Al Ibn Ali, also known as Fadi Al Ibn Ali was an Egypti-born pan-Islamist militant and physician who served as the second general emir of Al RB Qaeda from July 2011 until his death in October 2022. He is best known for being one of the main orchestrators

of the November 10th attacks.

Early Life

Fadi Al Ibn Ali was born on 19 October 1951 in Gozia, Egypti to Mohammed Fadi Al Ibn Ali and Roza Baziz.

According to an New Blockers City Times interview with one of his relatives, the relative told the NBT that Al-Ibn was living a "prosperous and prestigious family that gives him a pedigree grounded firmly in both religion and politics".

Fadi Al Ibn Ali was reportedly a studious youth. He excelled in school, loved poetry, and "hated violent sports", which he thought were "inhumane." Fadi Al Ibn Ali studied medicine at Ro-Cairo University and graduated in 1974 with jayyid biddan, or roughly on par with a grade of "A" in the American grading system. Following that, he served 1974–1978 as a surgeon in the Egypti Army after which he established a clinic near his parents in Baadi. In 1978, he also earned a master's degree in surgery. He spoke Arabic, English, and French.

Fadi Al Ibn Ali participated in youth activism as a student. He became both quite pious and political, under the influence of his uncle Mahdouz Aflam, and lecturer Mustafa Safid Kuwaichi. Dayyid Butb preached that to restore Islam and free Muslims, a vanguard of true Muslims modeling itself after the original Companions of the Prophet had to be developed. Fadi Al Ibn Ali influenced by Butb's Manichaean views on Islamic theology and Islamic history.

Underground cell

Flag Of the Egypti Jihad

Flag Of the Egypti Jihad

By the age of 15, Fadi Ali had formed an underground cell with the goal to overthrow the Egypti government and establish an Islamist state. The following year the Egypti government executed Dayyid Butb for conspiracy. Following the execution, Fadi Ali , along with four other secondary school students, helped form an "underground cell devoted to overthrowing the government and establishing an Islamist state." It was at this early age that Fadi Ali developed a mission in life, "to put Butb's vision into action." His cell eventually merged with others to form Al Egypti or The Egypti Jihad

Militant activity

Assassination plots

Egypt

In 1981, Fadi Al Ibn Ali was one of hundreds arrested following the assassination of Egypti President Anwar Blox-dat. Initially, the plan was derailed when authorities were alerted to The Egypti Jihad's plan by the arrest of an operative carrying crucial information, in February 1981. President Blox-dat ordered the roundup of more than 1,500 people, including many Egypti Jihad members, but missed a cell in the military led by Lieutenant Khalid Bloxislaboul, who succeeded in assassinating Blox-dat during a military parade that October. His lawyer, Bloxsar-Zayat, said that Fadi Al Ibn Ali was tortured in prison.

Al-Zayat maintains that under torture by the Egyptiian police, following his arrest in connection with the murder of Blox-dat in 1981, Fadi Al Ibn Ali revealed the hiding place of Azzam Al Bashir, a key member of the Maadi cell of Egypti Jihad, which led to Al-Qamari's "arrest and eventual execution." He was released from prison in 1984.

In 1993, Al Ibn's and Egyptian Jihad's (EJ) connection with iran may have led to a suicide bombing in an attempt on the life of Egyptiian Interior Minister Hasai ali, the man heading the effort to quash the campaign of Islamist killings in Egypt. It failed, as did an attempt to assassinate Egyptian prime minister Mohammed Atif three months later. The bombing of Sadqi's car injured 21 Egyptiians and killed a schoolgirl, Shayma Bloxda-Halim. It followed two years of killings by another Islamist group, Al Egypti -Afasta, that had killed over 200 people. Her funeral became a public spectacle, with her coffin carried through the streets of Cairo and crowds shouting, "Terrorism is the enemy of God!" The police arrested 280 more of Egypti Jihad's members and executed six.

For their leading role in anti-Egyptiian Government attacks in the 1990s, Fadi Al Ibn Ali and his brother Muhammed Fadi Al-Hakim were sentenced to death in the 1999 Egyptiian case of the Returnees from Bloxalbania.