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Malik Obama: Barack is cold and ruthless

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A “cold and ruthless” President Obama abandoned his Kenyan family in their greatest hours of need, according to a new tell-all by estranged half brother Malik Obama.

Malik and Barack in Kenya in 1988.jpg

“He got rich and became a snob,” Malik, 62, told The Post via Skype from his home in the Kenyan village of Nyang'oma Kogelo. “What I saw was he was the kind of person that wants people to worship him. He needs to be worshiped and I don't do that. I am his older brother so I don't do that.”

Barack and Malik in Boston in 1990.jpg

Both Malik and Barack Obama share the same father, Barack Hussein Obama Sr., a Kenyan economist who died in a car accident in 1982. Malik first met his half brother in 1985 when Barack was a 24-year-old Chicago community organizer, and they enjoyed warm relations for more than a decade.

Malik spent years working in the United States, where he has dual citizenship, and frequently traveled between the US and his homeland. Malik was the best man at Barack Obama's wedding in 1992. When Barack became president, Malik was a regular visitor to the Oval Office.

Malik and Barack Obama.jpg

The president, in retrospect, might have been right to be skeptical. In 2011, the foundation ran into trouble for failing to register as a tax-exempt, federally recognized nonprofit — and falsely claiming that it had. While the foundation still technically exists, it's raised less than $50,000 each year since 2011, according to tax filings.

In the same call, President Obama also informed his brother that his aunt, Hawa Auma Hussein, the only surviving full-sibling of their father, wouldn't be making the guest list for the inauguration. While Obama was in the White House, Aunt Hawa lived in near-poverty working as a charcoal seller, in a collapsing house, according to local Kenyan media.

When Barack Obama visited Kenya in July 2015, brother Malik made a personal appeal on behalf of Hawa during a family dinner.

Barack and Malik in Boston in 1990.jpg

“It was awkward as I tried to convey Auntie Hawa's wishes to her nephew. She wanted him to look out for her, build her a house, etc. I told him he owed it to her, to the family for him to do anything, something,” Malik writes. “Barack said that he was broke.”

Another aunt, Zeituni Onyango, fared no better, squatting illegally in Boston public housing before being granted asylum in 2010. When she died penniless in 2014, Malik Obama made a reluctant appeal to his brother for help burying her.

“We needed to pay for the bills and the cost of her transportation back to Kenya,” Malik writes of an Oval Office meeting on April 16. “[Barack] asked me how much and I told him roughly $20,000. This was too much he said.”

The president ultimately gave $5,000 to the effort but it took another month before the Obama family could raise the rest of the funds.

“She really had been good to him,” Malik Obama writes. “I don't understand how somebody who claimed to be a relative or a brother can behave the way that he's behaving, be so cold and ruthless, and just turn his back on the people he said were his family.”

Malik Obama made national headlines after announcing he was supporting Trump over Hillary Clinton. He became one of the billionaire's most ardent defenders on social media, earning a hit piece in BuzzFeed and an invitation to the third presidential debate, where he palled around with Kellyanne Conway.

Malik's faith in Trump remains unwavering.

“[I'm] 110% still with Trump,” he said. “He's not fake. He tells us the way he sees it. He's bold and fearless and he's tough.”

He also mocked the Democratic nominee Joe Biden as too old and feeble to win.

“I don't think he's going to make it. His teeth are falling off,” Obama laughed. “He looks like he's going to drop dead.”


 
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