Malik Obama, Barack Obama's relative, said he would vote in favor of Republican candidate, Donald Trump, in the US decision in November.
Malik, 58, said on Monday, July 25, 2016, from Obama's tribal home of Kogelo in western Kenya that he backings Trump's strategies, particularly his emphasis on security.
He said he adored the Republican competitor Donald Trump and that he was miserable with his sibling's administration.
"He engages me furthermore I feel that he is sensible and he talks from the heart and he is not attempting to be politically right. He's only straight-forward," he said.
Malik, a US subject, has lived in Washington since 1985 where he worked with different firms before turning into an autonomous budgetary expert.
Malik said that Trump's position against Muslims coming into the United States was justifiable even to Muslims like himself.
"I'm a Muslim, obviously, yet you can't have individuals going around recently shooting individuals and executing individuals just for the sake of Islam.''
He scrutinized President Obama's record in the White House, saying he had not done much for the American individuals and his more distant family notwithstanding the exclusive standards that went with his decision in 2008, both in the United States and Kenya.
Malik has gone to the president in the Oval Office and was likewise best man at Barack's wedding.
Obama's race made much energy in Kenya, particularly in Kogelo town, where their dad was conceived before going to learn at the University of Hawaii.
Obama went to Nairobi, in the main ever trip by a sitting US president toward the East African country last July and guaranteed to visit all the more regularly when he leaves office.
Malik shielded his entitlement to reprimand his sibling, refering to opportunity of expression.
"To every his own, I talk my brain and I'm not going to be placed in a case on the grounds that my sibling is the President of the United States.
Malik, 58, said on Monday, July 25, 2016, from Obama's tribal home of Kogelo in western Kenya that he backings Trump's strategies, particularly his emphasis on security.
He said he adored the Republican competitor Donald Trump and that he was miserable with his sibling's administration.
"He engages me furthermore I feel that he is sensible and he talks from the heart and he is not attempting to be politically right. He's only straight-forward," he said.
Malik, a US subject, has lived in Washington since 1985 where he worked with different firms before turning into an autonomous budgetary expert.
Malik said that Trump's position against Muslims coming into the United States was justifiable even to Muslims like himself.
"I'm a Muslim, obviously, yet you can't have individuals going around recently shooting individuals and executing individuals just for the sake of Islam.''
He scrutinized President Obama's record in the White House, saying he had not done much for the American individuals and his more distant family notwithstanding the exclusive standards that went with his decision in 2008, both in the United States and Kenya.
Malik has gone to the president in the Oval Office and was likewise best man at Barack's wedding.
Obama's race made much energy in Kenya, particularly in Kogelo town, where their dad was conceived before going to learn at the University of Hawaii.
Obama went to Nairobi, in the main ever trip by a sitting US president toward the East African country last July and guaranteed to visit all the more regularly when he leaves office.
Malik shielded his entitlement to reprimand his sibling, refering to opportunity of expression.
"To every his own, I talk my brain and I'm not going to be placed in a case on the grounds that my sibling is the President of the United States.
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