Hiiraan Online
May-23-12
Today from Hiiraan Online:
Home
Somali Music
Somali Map
Sports
Opinion
Facebook
Twitter
Ohio man pleads guilty in U.S. to supporting al Shabaab
Reuters
Tuesday, February 07, 2012
An Ohio man pleaded guilty on Monday in federal court in Minnesota to U.S. charges of helping raise money for al Shabaab rebels in Somalia, prosecutors said.
Ahmed Hussein Mahamud, 27, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to provide material support to a group designated by the United States as a terrorist organization. He faces a maximum of 15 years in prison when he is sentenced at a later date.
Mahamud, a U.S. citizen who was indicted in June 2011, admitted to telling people in the Somali-American community in Minnesota the money would support a local Mosque or orphans but using it instead to help send men to Somalia to join al Shabaab, according to a plea agreement with federal prosecutors.
Mahamud and others raised up to $1,500 in the effort, using some of the money on airline tickets or other expenses, according to the plea deal.
In other instances, Mahamud admitted to wiring $50 to a man in Somalia who was buying a firearm, $50 for other expenses to a second man and assisting someone in sending $100 to Somalia for a weapons purchase to support the organization, according to the plea agreement.
Mahamud, a Westerville, Ohio, resident who formerly lived in Minnesota, admitted to providing the support from 2008 through February of 2011.
Minnesota is home to the largest Somali-American population in the United States.
Since September 2007, about 20 men have left Minneapolis for Somalia to join al Shabaab. Eighteen people have been charged in federal court in Minnesota so far in the investigation. Eight have been arrested and seven have pleaded guilty.
At least two of the men who have been charged in the Minnesota investigation are believed to have been killed in Somalia.
The guilty plea comes weeks after a U.S. bank decided to shut down wire transfer services that provide a lifeline from Minnesota to Somalia over concerns that it could risk violating U.S. regulatory and anti-terrorism finance laws.
Each year Somali-Americans send about $100 million to Somalia through small money transfer businesses. Somalia has no formal banking system.
Erosion of trust hits the core of Somali businesses
- Daily Nation
Will the London conference change Somalia's future
- aljazeera
Somalia: The EU Joins Hands to Tackle Instability
- EUNFS
Finnish Somalis: No improvement in discrimination
- YLE
Iranian Navy Foils Pirate Attack on Oil Tanker in Gulf of Aden
- Maritime
Jessica Buchanan "overwhelmed," grateful
- CBS News
Terror attack shakes Garissa
- The Star
British Minister Restate London’s Commitment to a Peaceful Somalia
- VOA
Disaster relief must be more local and national, Oxfam says
- Guardian
Horn Of Africa Famine Six Months Later
- VOA
UN, partners say Somalia's interim political arrangement must end in August
- Pana
Is Malaria Twice as Deadly as We Think It Is?
- TIME
IMF approves $14 mln loan for drought-hit Djibouti
- Reuters
Eden Prairie grad funded terror group in Somalia
- StarTribune
Post your comments
Home
Email
Print
You need a Frames Capable browser to view this content.