The father of the Orlando nightclub shooter has given several interviews to major news outlets since his son's attack on a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida, that left at least 49 people dead and 52 others wounded.

Seddique Mateen — an Afghan immigrant who settled in New York and relocated to Fort Pierce, Florida, with his wife and son in 1991 — has been heavily scrutinized for comments he made on Facebook on Monday in which he denounced his son's actions by saying it was up to God, and not his son, to punish gay people.

"The punishment for homosexuality is upon God and he will decide on them not humans," Seddique wrote. "What he [my son] has done has shocked me. ... I ask God for help and guidance for all the youth to follow the true path of Islam."

When confronted about the Facebook comment by CNN's Don Lemon on Monday night, Seddique said the posting was "misunderstood."

"No, you must misunderstood me," Seddique said. "Maybe the translation was wrong. Anything a person does is between him and God, and God is the one who makes a judgment not a human being. We have no right to make a judgment about anybody."

Lemon then asked Seddique whether he thought homosexuality was a sin that went against his religion, and Seddique replied that the "general rule of thumb is that God created man for woman, woman for man."

"So as a teaching of religion," he added, "that's what it is."

Seddique, who is politically outspoken, has said Pakistan's military-run intelligence agency is the "creator and father of the world's terrorism." He is also heavily critical of Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, and he has his own YouTube channel on which he has expressed support for the Afghan Taliban. He recently declared his candidacy for the Afghan presidency.

Undated photo from a social-media account of Omar Mateen. Thomson Reuters

"He thinks he runs a government in exile and will soon take the power in Kabul in a revolution," CBS News' Ahmad Mukhtar said after watching and translating Seddique's videos from Dari, a Persian dialect spoken in Afghanistan.

On Sunday, Seddique told told NBC News that his son's actions had "nothing to do with religion." He said his son became angry when he saw two men kissing in Miami months ago, and he thought homophobia may have inspired his son to attack the nightclub.

But reports that his son, Omar Mateen, who was killed in the attack, had been attending the gay nightclub in Orlando, Pulse, at least once or twice a month for three years — and that he frequently reached out to men using several different gay dating apps — seem to belie Seddique's insistence that his son was repulsed by gay people.

Omar Mateen also had gay friends: Samuel King, a drag queen, told The Daily Beast that he had befriended Omar Mateen while the two worked next door to each other in Fort Pierce. King said Omar Mateen had seemed generally accepting of the fact that he and his friends were openly gay. King said he even recalled Omar Mateen's going at least once to the nightclub where King performed.

Based on Seddique's insinuation on Facebook that gay people will be punished by God, many have speculated that he may have projected bigotry onto his son — who may have internalized, repressed, and resented his own sexuality as a result.

Omar Mateen's ex-wife told reporters that her former husband "may have been gay, but chose to hide it out of anger and shame." Her current boyfriend, who is Brazilian, told a Brazilian television station that Omar Mateen's father accused him of being gay several times in front of his ex-wife before they divorced in 2011.

Seddique Mateen, Omar Mateen's father, spoke with Sky News in an interview on Tuesday. Screenshot/Sky News

Seddique told CNN that he didn't "judge anybody the way they live" and that, while his son was religious, "Islam doesn't teach this — discrimination or bad behavior about people."

"No religion or background teaches you to harm somebody or kill someone," Seddique told Sky News in another interview. "I don't forgive what he did — it's unforgivable because we didn't teach him to do this. I taught him to become more educated and more service-oriented towards the community."

And in yet another interview with CBS, Seddique said his son "doesn't have the right, nobody has the right to harm anything, anybody."

"What a person's lifestyle is, is up to him," he continued. "It's a free country. Everybody has their own choice to live the way they want to live."

'If I did notice, I would have called'

In his interviews, Seddique has largely deflected responsibility for failing to recognize signs of erratic behavior from his son. But Omar Mateen's unpredictable flashes of anger and aggression have been confirmed by everyone from his ex-wife — she called him "bipolar" — to regulars at Pulse nightclub, two of whom said they stopped talking to him after he threatened them with a knife for making an offhand religious comment.

Seddique, for his part, said he was never concerned about his son's mental health because he seemed "attentive to his work and his family." When asked about Omar Mateen's ex-wife's claim that he beat her, Seddique replied that she never came to him with a problem and that maybe she had a "personal grudge."

"If she had a problem, as Omar's father, why she didn’t come to me and say, 'This is a problem that you should talk to your son about'?"

Seddique largely echoed that sentiment on CBS.

"I wanted him to get higher education to be servant of the United States," he said. "If I did notice, I would have called."

Seddique said the nightclub should share some of the responsibility for the massacre because it did not have good enough security.

"If there was good security, he wouldn't have had this opportunity," Seddique told Sky News. "Why the law enforcement team was so late — they should have neutralized him quick ... This should not have happened."

Omar Mateen, 29, was living in Fort Pierce, Florida, when he rented a car and drove to Orlando to carry out the attack on Sunday morning. He was armed with an AR-15 assault-style rifle and a handgun that he had legally bought days before. He was a security guard and had a Florida firearms license that allowed him to carry concealed weapons.

He called 911 during his rampage at Pulse and pledged allegiance to the Islamic State, while also expressing sympathy for the Boston Marathon bombers and an American suicide bomber who was aligned with Al Qaeda in Syria. He was investigated by the FBI in 2013 and 2014 for suspected ties to terrorists.

The attack was the deadliest mass shooting in US history.