The New York Times reports that Ali Yasin Ahmen, Mahdi Hashi and Mohamed Yusuf |
Hashi, 23, is
accused of ‘providing material support’ to Somali
militant group al Shabaab. A statement
released by the FBI revealed that Hashi has been
in the US penal system since November 12. Neither
his family nor his UK legal team were informed.
The US claims
that between 2008 and 2012 Hashi carried out weapons
and explosive training with al Shabaab and was
‘deployed in combat operations to support al
Shabaab’s military action in Somalia.’ It adds that
he allegedly participated in ‘an elite al Shabaab
suicide bomber program’.
In June,
Hashi’s family was notified that he had been
stripped of his British citizenship; the Home
Secretary claimed he was ‘involved in Islamist
extremism’. Hashi and a group of Somali Muslim
friends in Camden, London, previously claimed MI5
had subjected them to a campaign of harassment and
had threatened to label them as terrorists unless
they agreed to work as informants.
Mohamed Hashi
told the Bureau his son disappeared from his home
on the outskirts of Mogadishu weeks after losing his
citizenship and that the family was later contacted
by a man who said he had been held alongside Hashi
in a jail in neighbouring Djibouti.
The fellow
inmate also mentioned that two Somali-Swedes were in
the facility. Hashi is charged alongside Ali Yasin
Ahmed, 27, and Mohamed Yusuf, 29. The New York Times
reports the men ‘appeared in court with the aid
of a Swedish interpreter’, and Yusuf’s lawyer
told Bloomberg his client held Swedish
citizenship.
Hashi
was taken from the jail by Americans, his family was
told by the former prisoner. Yet until the case was
unsealed yesterday, they had no further clue as to
his whereabouts. The Bureau contacted the State
Department on Thursday to ask if Hashi was in US
custody and was told: ‘We do not have anything on
this to share publicly at this time.’
Saghir Hussain,
Hashi’s solicitor, told the Bureau: ‘It seems the US
disappeared Mahdi Hashi for the past several months
and rendered him to New York. The British government
also needs to explain its involvement in this case.’
Asim Qureshi,
research director of campaign group
CagePrisoners said: ‘If Mahdi Hashi had still
been a British citizen he would have had some
protection. But he has had his citizenship taken
away and that has left him open to being a victim of
rendition to the US with no state to defend his
rights.’
According to
the FBI, the three men were arrested ‘in Africa’ in
early August ‘while on their way to Yemen.’ No
information is given as to the nationality of the
local authorities that carried out the arrest.
A New York
court issued a secret indictment against the men on
October 18. On November 14, the FBI ‘took custody of
the defendants and brought them to the Eastern
District of New York’, a statement says. But it
provides no information as to where the men were
held, or who had custody up to that point. If
convicted, they face at least 30 years in jail.
This is not
the only case in US courts against alleged
terrorists for acts committed overseas.
In July 2011,
Somali national Ahmed Abdulkadir Wasame pleaded
not guilty to supporting al Shabaab and al Qaeda
in the Arabian Peninsula in a New York federal
court. The Justice Department
said he was ‘captured in the Gulf region by the
US military on April 19, 2011, and was questioned
for intelligence purposes for more than two months’
before being handed to law enforcement.
Other sources
reported Warsame had been captured by JSOC, the
special forces unit that runs most US operations in
Somalia and Yemen, and was held in international
waters on the JSOC ship the USS Boxer for
questioning.
FBI assistant
director-in-charge Janice K Fedarcyk said of the
Warsame case: ‘The mission of the FBI is to protect
innocent lives not just in the United States, but
everywhere the law permits us to.’
But Republican
Senate leader Mitch McConnell told the
New York Times: ‘The administration’s actions
are inexplicable, create unnecessary risks here at
home, and do nothing to increase the security of the
United States.’
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