The Borneo Post

Singapore hands down first conviction for terror financing

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SINGAPORE: A Singaporea­n man became the first of the country’s citizens to be jailed for financing terrorism a er he was convicted of sending money to a radical Islamist preacher.

There have been a steady stream of arrests in Singapore related to support for Islamist extremism, and the affluent citystate’s leaders have warned it is a prime target for an attack.

Ahmed Hussein Abdul Kadir Sheik Uduman was jailed for two and a half years for donating S$1,146 (US840) to Sheikh Abdullah al-Faisal, an Islamist preacher living in Jamaica, according to court documents seen by AFP yesterday.

Hussein reached out to Faisal a er watching videos on his website and YouTube channels in which he preached support for the Islamic State (IS) group.

Faisal was jailed for nine years in Britain in 2003 a er calling for the murders of non-Muslims and was deported to his native Jamaica a er serving four years of his sentence.

Hussein, who was handed a prison term Thursday, was arrested in July 2018 under Singapore’s Internal Security Act, which allows for detention without trial for up to two years.

He had been radicalise­d and “wanted to undertake armed violence in Syria in support of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria,” court documents said.

The prosecutio­n recommende­d jail time to send “a strong message to other like-minded individual­s that supporting terrorist propaganda through financial means will attract uncompromi­sing punishment”, they said.

In September, authoritie­s detained three Indonesian maids without trial over allegation­s they donated funds to support IS. And in July, two Singaporea­ns accused of intending to join the jihadists were arrested.

IS lost the last scrap of its selfdeclar­ed ‘caliphate’ this year but remains influentia­l. There are fears that foreign fighters returning from the Middle East could rejuvenate terror networks elsewhere, including in Southeast Asia.

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