Tuesday, July 28, 2009

More Minnesota home-grown jihadists






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The number of terrorist-related incidents
involving Somali Muslims who have come to the United States as refugees
continues to grow. How long will it be before these “homegrown jihadists”
take direct action against us here in the United States?







FBI confirms terror indictments, missing Somalis
linked


by Elizabeth Stawicki, Minnesota Public Radio,
Laura Yuen, Minnesota Public Radio

http://minnesota.publicradio.org/display/web/2009/07/13/terror_indictment/?refid=0



St. Paul, Minn. — A federal grand jury in St. Paul has indicted
two men on terrorism charges, in connection with the ongoing investigation
of missing Somali men.

The indictment, which was filed in February
but unsealed Monday, names Abdifatah Yusuf Isse and Salah Osman Ahmed of
Brooklyn Park with providing material support to terrorists, namely
themselves.

The indictment also charges the men with conspiring to
"kill, maim, and injure" outside of the U.S. It says Ahmed boarded a
Northwest flight last December from Minneapolis to Amsterdam with a final
destination of Somalia to "fight jihad in Somalia."

Ahmed is also
charged with lying to the FBI.

E.K. Wilson, spokesman of the FBI
office in Minneapolis, confirmed that the indictments were connected to
the investigation of missing Somali men believed to have joined a
terrorist group fighting in their homeland.

Wilson said
authorities arrested Ahmed, of New Brighton, in that town Saturday without
incident. He declined to comment further. "The investigation continues,"
he said.

About 20 men from Minnesota are believed to be fighting
in Somalia's civil war. The first wave left in 2007. Authorities think one
of those early travelers, Shirwa Ahmed of Minneapolis, blew himself up in
a suicide bombing in Somalia last fall.


==========================================

Grand jury: 2 conspired to commit terror acts in
Somalia


By David Hanners
dhanners@pioneerpress.com


Updated:
07/13/2009 06:55:33 PM CDT

http://www.twincities.com/news/ci_12828798?source=rss



Federal authorities today unsealed a five-month-old indictment
charging two Twin Cities men with terrorism conspiracy in their native
Somalia.

One of the men, Salah Osman Ahmed, had been a fugitive
but had been apprehended recently and appeared before a federal magistrate
today. He is to have a detention hearing Thursday.

Federal
officials would not say when or where he was taken into custody.


The other man, Abdifatah Yusuf Isse, was arrested in February and
has been held since then, said his attorney, Paul Engh, of Minneapolis.


The indictment says that at least Ahmed, of Brooklyn Park,
traveled to Somalia in December 2007 with another person "so that they
could fight jihad in Somalia."

Engh — who is required to have a
security clearance just to defend Isse — said that because virtually all
of the case remains sealed, he couldn't discuss the case.

"I can't
do that without talking about something that's sealed," he said. "I can't
even say if they traveled together. I've read a ton of stuff and I'd
rather not comment on the substance of it. I'm totally aware of the facts.
I'm well-versed in what's going on, but I really can't say much."


Similarly, the office of outgoing U.S. Attorney Frank Magill
declined comment. "Our office is not issuing a news release on the Salah
Ahmed indictment. Our office also has no statement regarding the
indictment," said David Anderson, a spokesman for Magill.

Federal
officials have been investigating claims that some young male Somali
refugees in the Twin Cities have been recruited by Islamic groups to fight
in their homeland.

A fourth young Somali-American man who
disappeared from the Twin Cities in recent years apparently has been
killed in Somalia, a local community leader said Sunday night.


Omar Jamal, executive director of the St. Paul-based Somali
Justice Advocacy Center, said his group had received word that Zakaria
Maruf, 30, of Minneapolis was killed in combat.

Maruf is one of an
estimated 20 men from the Twin Cities suspected of going to Somalia to
fight in the Islamist Shabaab insurgency in the country's civil war. Last
weekend, relatives and community leaders said another from the group —
Jamal Bana, 20 — also had been killed in Somalia.

Another young
Somali man from Minneapolis, Shirwa Ahmed, is believed to have carried out
a suicide bombing last October as part of coordinated attacks that
targeted a United Nations compound, the Ethiopian consulate and the
presidential palace in Hargeisa, capital of the Somaliland region.


FBI Director Robert Mueller said in February that the bomber had
probably been "radicalized" in the Twin Cities.

In June, the
Minneapolis family of another young Somali, Burhan Hassan, said they
believed he had been killed and buried in Somalia.

Isse and Ahmed
were each charged with a single count of providing material support to
terrorists, as well as a count of conspiracy to "kill, kidnap, maim and
injure." The alleged incidents occurred between September 2007 and
December 2008, the indictment claims.

The dates coincide with the
disappearance of the first wave of young Somali men from the Twin Cities.


The recruitment of the Twin Cities men can be traced to a group of
Somali immigrants from Northern Europe and other countries who traveled to
Somalia in 2005 to fight with the Islamist movement, a senior law
enforcement official said, according to a New York Times report Sunday. A
handful of those men later went to Minneapolis and helped persuade the
first large group from the Twin Cities to leave for Somalia starting in
late 2007, the official said.

The material support, the indictment
alleges, was "namely personnel including themselves, knowing and intending
that the material support and resources" were going to be used to kill,
kidnap or injure people in a foreign country.

The conspiracy
charge alleges that they conspired with each other "and others, known and
unknown to the grand jury," to engage in terrorism.

The indictment
alleges that on Dec. 6, 2007, Ahmed boarded a Northwest Airlines flight
from Minneapolis to Amsterdam, "with a final destination of Somalia."


Ahmed is named in two additional counts of making false statements
to FBI agents. The first of the counts alleges that while he knew people
on his December 2007 flights to Somalia, on July 30 he told the FBI that
he didn't know anyone on the flights.

The second of the charges
claims that he traveled with others on the flights, but on Dec. 8, he told
the FBI that he traveled alone.










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