Showing posts with label Jihad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jihad. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Just a Typical Day for Jihad





 1/9/12 09:30 AM ET
Associated Press

FRANKFURT, Germany -- Prosecutors are asking for a sentence of life in prison for an alleged Islamic extremist who has admitted killing two U.S. airmen at the Frankfurt airport last year.
The dapd news agency reported that Prosecutor Jochen Weingarten told the Frankfurt state court in closing arguments Monday that Arid Uka deserved the maximum possible sentence due to the brutal nature of the crime.

The 21-year-old ethnic Albanian from Kosovo confessed as the trial opened to killing two men at point-blank range before wounding two more airmen and taking aim at a third before his gun misfired.
Under German law the court still has to review all the evidence despite the confession.

A verdict is expected on Jan. 19.










islam

Sunday, June 6, 2010

NJ Terror Suspects: Christian Fundamentalists? Nope. Islamic jihadists? Yep. Coincidence? I have no clue.

Feds Unseal Terror Charges Against 2 NJ Men


June 6, 2010 - 11:55 AM
by: Mike Levine

Federal authorities on Sunday unsealed charges against two New Jersey men arrested the night before, as they allegedly tried to join an Al Qaeda-linked group in war-torn Somalia and kill Americans there.

The men were inspired at least in part by Omar Hammami, the Alabama-born face of the Somali-based terrorist group, and Anwar al-Awlaki, the New Mexico-born cleric now hiding in Yemen who has been linked to the Fort Hood shootings, the Christmas Day bombing attempt and the failed Times Square car bomb plot, according to federal prosecutors.

20-year-old Mohamed Mahmood Alessa of North Bergen, N.J., and 24-year-old Carlos Eduardo Almonte of Elmwood Park, N.J., have been charged with conspiring to kill or injure persons outside the United States.

They were taken into custody late Saturday night at JFK International Airport, as they attempted to board separate flights to Egypt on their way to Somalia, where the group al-Shabaab is battling the nation’s fledgling transitional government.

After the FBI received a tip in October 2006, an undercover officer with the New York Police Department’s Intelligence Division recorded numerous meetings and conversations with Alessa and Almonte about their violent plans, according to court documents.

On Saturday night, a team of federal agents and local law enforcement were waiting for them at the airport, arrest warrants in hand. Meanwhile, Other federal agents raided the men’s New Jersey homes.

According to prosecutors, over the years Alessa and Almonte saved thousands of dollars, procured military gear and apparel for use overseas, and “physically conditioned” themselves, which included engaging in paintball and other tactical training. They also watched and shared recordings promoting violent jihad, including lectures by al-Awlaki and online videos featuring Hammami, who is now known as "Abu Mansour al-Amriki," prosecutors allege.

In late November 2009, Alessa was recorded as saying that if he and Almonte can’t kill targets overseas, then they’ll “start doing killing here” in the United States, according to court documents. He later said he would return to the “crap hole” of the United States if “the leader ordered me to come back here and do something,” court documents allege.

Speaking of U.S. Army Maj. Nidal Hasan, who allegedly killed 13 people at Fort Hood, Tex., last year, Alessa also discussed doing "twice what he did," according to court documents.

More recently, on April 25, Almonte allegedly said he was happy to hear rumors that Americans would soon be arriving in Somalia to help fight al-Shabaab. Almonte said killing more than Africans would be particularly gratifying, according to prosecutors.

A month earlier, a top State Department official, Assistant Secretary Johnnie Carson, tried to quell rumors of further U.S. involvement, insisting that the United States would not offer any “direct support” to the Somali government. Instead, he told reporters at the time, the United States has been contributing "limited military support," without U.S. soldiers on the ground.

While law enforcement officials have recently said there is no intelligence to suggest al-Shabaab is actively plotting attacks inside the United States, New York Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said such a strike was "a possibility in this case."

For more than a year, the FBI has been investigating how dozens of Americans from across the country were recruited to train and fight alongside al-Shabaab, which has pledged its allegiance to Usama bin Laden.

The New York Police Department has also “long been concerned” about Americans being radicalized inside the country, Kelly said. About a year ago, an NYPD intelligence officer met with experts on the ground in East Africa, trying to learn more about how al-Shabaab operates and recruits foreigners, according to one source.

In October 2008, 27-year-old college student Shirwa Ahmed of Minneapolis became "the first known American suicide bomber" when he blew himself up in Somalia, killing dozens, according to the FBI.

Somalia has had no stable government since 1991, when dictator Siad Barre was ousted from power. The transitional government has had trouble keeping Muslim militants at bay, and in 2006 fighting with al-Shabaab intensified after Western-backed Ethiopian forces invaded the country.

Alessa and Almonte are expected to appear in court on Monday. If convicted, they each face up to life in prison.

**********************************************

I fully appreciate the fears many people had about Bush and the Patriot Act.  Nearly every day or at least once a week, for the 7 or so years Bush was President.  The bill was signed into law in October 2001 and Bush left office in January 2009 - I heard an incessant cry about the rights of Americans being taken away by the federal government (I won't mention how many more infringements have occurred against ALL Americans in the last 18 months but) ... the Patriot Act was intended, not for individuals like me or my neighbor - we could be involved in selling illegal birds or trading pogs.  It was intended and used, with very few exceptions against people like those in this story.  Several BORN in the US yet their parents are from Somalia or Yemen or Pakistan or ... and they preach anti-American hatred.  We believe in free speech, and that is fine and great, but the hatred preached by these Imams is not equivalent to the hate spewed by Michael Moore ... this hatred goes to support, aide, and incitement to murder Americans ....  This is what the law was intended to address, and quite honestly, taking the Imam to Court where he will argue free speech protections and be out again within a week doing the same thing, ultimately resulting in a 'deranged' male between 18-34 committing some act or murder ... more possible than not.

How do you combat that hatred?  Until now, the argument has been - the marketplace of ideas.  We let all the ideas and views get tossed out there and we combat bad ideas with good ideas.  We show by our actions our willingness to be model citizens or better human beings.  Odd then that the left in this country is now about regulating the blogosphere and internet, particularly concerning hate speech.  For the left today, hate speech cannot be permitted in the marketplace of ideas, for that somehow doesn't work, rather it needs to be regulated - UNLIKE Islamic hate speech which needs to be protected. 

In any event, the regulations, control, laws, privacy concerns have all quadrupled in the last 18 months, but Michael Moore is not to be heard from nor are any other leftist loons.











 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Islam

Friday, January 2, 2009

Somalia: Jihadis On their Way

Families of Somalis missing from Minn. speak out

By AMY FORLITI – Dec 7, 2008

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Three Somali families tell similar stories: A son or nephew disappears. A passport is gone. Days later the phone rings, and the teen says he's in Somalia.

The phone call is abrupt and short on details. And then, nothing.

Breaking their monthlong silence, relatives of three teenagers said Saturday that they fear their loved ones are victims, brainwashed to return to Somalia to fight. The impoverished nation on the Horn of Africa is caught up in an Islamic insurgency and hasn't had a functioning government in 17 years.

"We are not sure who is responsible," said Hussein Samatar, a community leader and uncle to a 17-year-old who traveled to Somalia. "But we, as a community, believe they have to be held accountable."

Samatar and other relatives confirmed their loved ones left Minneapolis, home to one of the nation's largest Somali communities, together on Nov. 4. The young men were identified as Burhan Hassan, 17, Mohamoud Hassan, 18, and Abdisalam Ali, 19.


Abdirizak Bihi, a community organizer and also an uncle to the 17-year-old, said that at least three more young men left the same day, and that he knows of about six others who have left and traveled to Somalia over the past two years.

"This issue of missing children has been going on for quite some time," Bihi said. "We want our children back home."

One man who disappeared from Minneapolis earlier is believed to have killed himself in an Oct. 29 suicide bombing that also took the lives of more than 20 people in northern Somalia, according to a U.S. law enforcement official. The official, who was not authorized to talk publicly about the case and spoke on condition of anonymity, confirmed that the FBI and Justice Department were investigating.

Another U.S. law enforcement official, also speaking on condition of anonymity for the same reason, said authorities are calling that case one of the first instances of a U.S. citizen acting as a suicide bomber.

Agent E.K. Wilson, an FBI spokesman in Minneapolis, said last week that his office helped return the remains of a U.S. citizen to the city. He said the body was taken from the Oct. 29 bombing but would not confirm whether the remains were that of a suicide bomber or a victim. He would not confirm the name of the deceased.

Wilson has previously said the FBI is "aware that a number of individuals from throughout the U.S., and Minneapolis, have traveled to Somalia to potentially fight for terrorist groups."

He said Saturday that the agency is working with families and community leaders to address their concerns. He did not confirm or deny the existence of an investigation.

The three families who came forward Saturday said their loved ones were good children who went to school and attended Abubakar As-Saddique mosque.

Mahir Sherif, an attorney for the mosque, said the mosque and its leaders have not recruited anyone to fight in Somalia.

"They did not fund any trips. They didn't arrange for any meetings with anybody. They didn't encourage anybody to go there," he said. "They have done nothing."

[No one OFFICiALLY recruited or requested or paid - however, the religious leader told the youngsters that every Muslim was required to do jihad when Islam was in danger, islam was in danger in Somalia, and if anyone wanted to do jihad anywhere at any time, there were wealthy Somalis who would pay for plane tickets. So the lawyer can say what he said and not lie. Amazing how it works.]

Bihi, one of the organizers of Saturday's news conference, said the families want the public to know about their children.

Relatives said Burhan Hassan, the 17-year-old, was a senior at Roosevelt High School; 18-year-old Mohamoud Hassan was studying engineering at the University of Minnesota; and 19-year-old Abdisalam Ali was studying health care at the University of Minnesota.

The three teens knew one another and were friends, and Bihi said none of them could have afforded a plane ticket back to Somalia on his own. Each teen contacted his family only once after disappearing, saying he was either in Somalia or in its capital city of Mogadishu. The teens haven't been heard from since, Bihi said.

Warsame Hassan, a brother-in-law to Burhan Hassan, noted that Somalis have fled their homeland to escape violence and provide their children with a good education.

"We don't know who is behind this, and we are urging authorities to get to the bottom of this," Warsame Hassan said.

The Somali population in Minnesota was more than 24,000 in 2006, according to the U.S. Census. Local activists claim the actual number is higher.

Minnesota

Somalia

Make Mine Freedom - 1948


American Form of Government

Who's on First? Certainly isn't the Euro.