Somali Charged in Alleged Plot on Ohio Mall
NewsMax.com Wires
Monday, June 14, 2004
WASHINGTON A Somali native living in Ohio has been
charged with plotting with other al-Qaida operatives to blow up a
shopping mall in the Columbus area, according to an indictment unsealed
Monday.
The four-count indictment, returned by a grand jury in Columbus,
charges that Nuradin Abdi, 32, conspired with admitted
al-Qaida member Iyman Faris and others to detonate a bomb at the
unidentified shopping mall after he obtained military-style
training in Ethiopia.
Attorney General John Ashcroft announced the indictment at a
Justice Department news conference and used the occasion to warn
anew of al-Qaida's threat. "Current credible intelligence
indicates that al-Qaida wants to hit the United States, to hit the
United States hard," he said.
Abdi is also charged with fraud and misuse of documents by
claiming that he had been granted valid asylum status in the United
States. In fact, prosecutors say, he obtained that refugee document
under false pretenses.
There also is one count each of conspiracy to provide material
support to terrorists and conspiracy to provide material support to
a designated foreign terrorist organization, in this case al-Qaida.
The charges against Abdi, who has been in custody since November
on immigration violations, were handed up by the grand jury
last Thursday.
A government motion seeking to keep Abdi in detention says he
returned to the United States from Africa in March 2000 and was met
at the airport in Columbus by Faris. Those two and other
unidentified coconspirators were involved in the alleged shopping
mall plot, prosecutors say.
One of the immigration charges contends that Abdi concealed his
true destination when he applied on April 27, 1999, for a U.S.
travel document. He said he was going to Germany and Saudi Arabia
to visit Mecca and relatives.
In fact, "as the defendant well knew, he planned to travel to
Ogaden, Ethiopia, for the purpose of obtaining military-style
training in preparation for violent Jihad," the indictment says.
The training allegedly included use of guns, bombs and guerrilla
warfare.
Faris is serving a 20-year federal sentence after pleading
guilty last June to providing material support to al-Qaida. Faris,
an Ohio truck driver originally from Kashmir, admitted
plotting to sever the cables supporting the Brooklyn Bridge in New
York and to derail trains in New York or Washington.
Neither of those plots came to fruition.
Faris had received instructions from top al-Qaida leader Khalid
Shaikh Mohammed for what might have been a second wave of attacks
to follow those of Sept. 11, 2001, investigators say. Mohammed, the
alleged mastermind of the hijackings, is in U.S. custody at an
undisclosed overseas location.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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