Burned out cars sit on the top of the structure. After the attack on the Westgate mall in Nairobi, Kenya, substantial attention was given to the some 40 Americans who have traveled to fight for Al-Shabaab in Somalia during the past several years.
But much less attention
has focused on Al-Shabaab's supporters in the United States who have
helped to fund the terrorist group. Those supporters have funneled tens
of thousands of dollars via money transfer businesses to the terrorist
organization and have often maintained direct contact with Al-Shabaab
leaders and fighters in Somalia.
After the 9/11 attacks,
when it became clear to investigators that al Qaeda's deadly assaults on
New York and Washington had cost as much as $500,000 to mount, the U.S.
government became far more aggressive about trying to block funds going
to terrorist organizations.
Part of that process
involved a determined effort to sort through which groups were terrorist
organizations. On 9/11 there were only 26 terrorist groups on the State
Department's list of designated Foreign Terrorist Organizations. Today there are 51, among them Al-Shabaab, which was designated in March 2008.
The result of that
designation was that it was now illegal for a person in the United
States to knowingly provide Al-Shabaab with money, training, expertise,
false documentation, communications equipment, weapons or explosives, or
to join the group.
On that basis, a number of cases have emerged:
• In Rochester,
Minnesota, two women from Somalia who had become naturalized U.S.
citizens helped organize funding for Al-Shabaab. Hawo Hassan, a
64-year-old adult day care worker, and Amina Farah Ali, 35, set up a dedicated teleconference line to raise funds for Al-Shabaab.
Hundreds of interested
individuals called in to these teleconferences, and after each one
Hassan and Ali recorded pledges of funds from the callers. After a
teleconference on October 26, 2008, the two women received pledges from
21 individuals totaling $2,100 in funds for Al-Shabaab.
These teleconferences
often featured Al-Shabaab figures. In one teleconference, an Al-Shabaab
female leader exhorted the listening audience to send funds. In another,
Mahad Karate, the head of Al-Shabaab's intelligence wing, told the
members of the listening audience that jihad "is waged financially" and
that their help was needed.
The two female
Al-Shabaab fund-raisers also went door to door in Minnesota to raise
contributions, often under false pretenses claiming contributions were
for war orphans in Somalia. During a phone call with her Al-Shabaab
financial contact, Ali stated, "I tell the people to collect money in
the name of the poor. Nobody is aware of the money I send to you."
Prosecutors said it was
clear from the phone conversations that they monitored that the two
women knew that they were raising money for Al-Shabaab, a group that had
been designated a terrorist organization by the U.S. State Department.
Both women were convicted of providing funds to Al-Shabaab and were
sentenced to lengthy prison terms this year.
• Similarly, Ahmed Hussein Mahamud, a 27-year-old man, raised money from
the Minnesota Somali community under the pretense that the money was
going to a local mosque or to help orphans in Somalia. Instead he
transferred the funds to fellow conspirators who had traveled from
Minnesota to fight in Somalia to help them buy weapons. He and his
co-conspirators transferred $1,500 to help Al-Shabaab. Mahamud pleaded
guilty last year.
• Nima Ali Yusuf, a
25-year-old San Diego woman, who pleaded guilty in December 2011 to
sending $1,450 to help fund Al-Shabaab, was in telephone contact with some of the Somali-American men fighting in Somalia for Al-Shabaab.
• In 2007, Aden Hashi Ayrow, a Al-Shabaab leader, contacted Basaaly Saeed Moalin, a cabdriver in San Diego, asking him to fund his group.
In January 2008, Ayrow told Moalin that he needed to know how much
money was being sent monthly to his group, even if it was only $100,
because even relatively small amounts of money could make a big
difference in Somalia, which is one of the poorest countries in the
world. To keep an Al-Shabaab foot soldier in the field only cost a dollar a day.
At Ayrow's request,
Moalin organized other members of the Somali-American community to help
provide funding. Moalin recruited three others members of the
Somali-American community and together they sent $8,500 to Al-Shabaab
between 2007 and 2008. All four were later convicted of providing
support to Al-Shabaab.
• Another Al-Shabaab supporter in St Louis, cabdriver Mohamud Abdi Yusuf, was part of a group of men that sent $21,000 to Kenya and Somalia for Al-Shabaab. Yusuf pleaded guilty to giving support to the terrorist group.
Since Al-Shabaab was
designated as a terrorist organization, the U.S. Justice Department has
mounted "Operation Rhino" to combat Al-Shabaab's support network in the
States and has convicted 12 individuals for providing funds to
Al-Shabaab, according to a count by the New America Foundation.
This seems to have had a
real deterrent effect. As a result of the publicity these cases have
had in the Somali-American community, indictments for Al-Shabaab
fund-raising have slowed considerably. And the last time a
Somali-American was indicted for raising money for Al-Shabaab was 2011.
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