The controversial guest speaker who appeared at the Democratic National Convention to wave a copy of the U.S. Constitution in the air and attack GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump now is claiming Allah is against Trump, and is causing him to make "mistakes."

Khizr Khan, who has been linked to a movement that supports Islamic Shariah law over the U.S. Constitution, issued his comments in a report for Dunya News.

The significance of Khan's outrage has been attributed by media outlets to the death of his son, Humayun Khan, died in the invasion of Iraq while fighting for the U.S. military. The Dunya News report characterized that death as being "martyred."

Dunya News said Khan claimed "that Allah makes people like Trump to make mistakes to discredit them in public eyes forever."

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"Talking exclusively to Dunya News on program Nuqta-e-Nazar, Khizr Khan said he often gets emotional while speaking in public but when nature wants you to do something, words come by themselves. He said his speech was a gift from the God. 'I showed the Constitution only because I wanted to remind people that nobody could be discriminated against in the name of religion,' said Khizr."

The report continued, "Khan said that Donald Trump actually exposed himself by criticizing him. He added that Donald Trump’s words were stupid. 'All citizens must be equal before the state. All immigrants are against the stupid Republican candidate,' he said."

The report was highlighted by writer Jim Hoft for The Religion of Peace website and at Gateway Pundit.

"House of War: Islam's Jihad Against the World" conveys what the West needs to know about Islam and the violent, expansionary ideology that seeks the subjugation and destruction of other faiths, cultures and systems of government

"Allah akbar," Hoft wrote. "Shariah-supporting attorney Khizr Khan is still making the media rounds."

Hoft also had reported on Khan's Shariah allegiance.

"Wow! Only memorable moment from DNC convention was ALL A LIE! Khizr Khan believes Shariah trumps Constitution," he wrote in a headline.

Linking to an online Infowars report explaining Khan founded the Islamic Journal to defend Shariah, which provides for the execution of Christians and Jews, Hoft wrote, "Now we know all of that Muslim screaming was a lie."

WND reported only a day ago Kahn has links to Democrat nominee Hillary Clinton's secret email server that she used as secretary of state.

As WND had reported, Khan previously worked for nine years at the Washington-based global law firm Hogan & Hartson, which is now called Hogan Lovells Llp. Today, he has a law firm in New York called KM Khan Law Office. But on Tuesday, he suddenly deleted his law firm's website from the Internet.

According to a screenshot captured by the Internet archiving website Wayback Machine, Khan managed Hogan & Hartson's "Litigation Technology Services group" for the firm's domestic and international branches.

According to the page, Khan "was responsible for numerous large electronic discovery projects in complex litigation, mergers and acquisitions."

"Oddly enough, Hogan & Hartson – again, the firm for which Khan oversaw the tech branch for nearly a decade – was the law firm who handled the patent for 'SPAMTRAQ,' the spam-filtering program used on Clinton's server," according to the Daily Caller.

Breitbart's Patrick Howley reported that SPAMTRAQ was a creation of MX Logic, a Denver-based company that has a checkered history of leaving servers open to security breaches.

Bill and Hillary Clinton's personal tax attorney, Howard Topez, worked for Hogan & Hartson while Khan was there. Topaz is still employed at the firm.

There's another curious twist to Khan's work history at Hogan Lovells Llp, as the firm was contracted by the Saudis to work for the Royal Embassy of Saudi Arabia until 2016, according to the Washington Free Beacon.

The Free Beacon noted, "Robert Kyle, a lobbyist from the firm, has bundled $50,850 for Clinton's campaign," and it added: The Saudi government has "supplied the Clinton Foundation with millions. The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has given between $10 and $25 million to the foundation while Friends of Saudi Arabia has contributed between $1 and $5 million."

That connection led FrontPage Magazine's Robert Spencer to ask: "Is Saudi Arabia trying to manipulate the U.S. presidential election?"

As WND reported, Khan, who was accompanied by his wife Ghazala Khan, appeared on stage at the DNC and criticized Trump for proposing to temporarily halt migration from countries that have exported Muslim terrorists and to build a wall on America's southern border.

Khan accused Trump of proposing to violate the U.S. Constitution, apparently presuming the Constitution forbids vetting foreigners who want to enter the U.S. from countries known to harbor terrorists.

Kahn's son, Capt. Humayun S. M. Khan, was killed in Iraq in 2004 after he confronted a bomb-packed taxi that drove into a compound while he was inspecting soldiers on guard duty. He told the soldiers to drop to the ground then went to stop the car, which exploded, killing him and two Iraqi soldiers. He was buried in Arlington with full military honors and posthumously awarded a Bronze Star and Purple Heart.

Trump had issued a statement calling Humayun Khan "a hero" and urging vigilance in defeating radical Islamic terrorism.

"House of War: Islam's Jihad Against the World" conveys what the West needs to know about Islam and the violent, expansionary ideology that seeks the subjugation and destruction of other faiths, cultures and systems of government