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Un grup de 14 persoane din statele Minnesota, Alabama si California au fost puse sub acuzare iar o parte arestati de catre FBI pentru suport sau afiliere cu gruparea terorista somaleza Shabab.
FBI announced yesterday that two Americans are under arrest and 12 other individuals, including five U.S. citizens, have been charged with acts of terrorism that include providing money, personnel, and other material support to the Somali-based terrorist organization al Shabaab.
FBI announced yesterday that two Americans are under arrest and 12 other individuals, including five U.S. citizens, have been charged with acts of terrorism that include providing money, personnel, and other material support to the Somali-based terrorist organization al Shabaab.
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The government designated al Shabaab a terrorist
organization in 2008. The group has ties to al Qaeda and has made
numerous public statements threatening to harm the United States.
“Terrorist organizations such as al Shabaab continue to
radicalize and recruit U.S. citizens and others to train and fight with
them and to provide support for their violent activities,” said Sean
Joyce, executive assistant director of the FBI’s National Security
Branch. “Today’s charges and arrests give us all greater insight into
the evolving nature of the terrorist threat we face.”
The two arrested today—women who were naturalized U.S.
citizens and residents of Minnesota—have been charged with raising money
to support al Shabaab through door-to-door solicitations and
teleconferences in Somali communities in Minnesota and other locations
in the U.S. and Canada. In some cases, funds were raised under the false
pretense that they would be used to help the poor. The others
indicted—mostly young men—were charged with leaving the U.S. to join al
Shabaab.
The charges resulted from investigations coordinated by
the FBI and the Department of Justice and that involved our law
enforcement partners around the world. Our Joint Terrorism Task Forces
in Minneapolis, Mobile, and San Diego played a particularly significant
role, Joyce said, adding that the investigation is ongoing.
Recruitment by al Shabaab among the Somali-American
community is a “disturbing phenomenon that we’ve been investigating
intensely in recent years,” Holder said. He noted that in Minnesota
alone, between September 2007 and October 2009, 20 or more young men
traveled from Minneapolis to Somalia for al Shabaab training. Many of
them ultimately fought for the Muslim extremist group against Ethiopian
forces, African Union troops, and the transitional government there. At
least one young man from Minneapolis went on to become the first known
U.S. citizen suicide bomber.
“As demonstrated by the charges unsealed today,
we are seeing an increasing number of individuals—including U.S.
citizens—who have become captivated by extremist ideology and have taken
steps to carry out terrorist objectives, either at home or abroad,”
Holder said.
“For those who would become terrorists, these cases send
a strong message,” said FBI Director Robert S. Mueller. “They
underscore the need for continued vigilance against those who may seek
to harm us and our way of life.” He added, “Our agents and analysts will
continue to confront this threat with a strong and coordinated effort
as we work to protect all Americans.”
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