The National - News

Father claims American son convicted for terrorist plots is innocent

- ROB CRILLY

The Dubai-based father of a terrorist convicted in a New York court has defended his son, claiming Muhanad Mahmoud Al Farekh is innocent and was tortured in Pakistani custody before being handed to US agents.

Al Farekh could face life in prison when he is sentenced in January.

Last week, a jury found him guilty on nine counts, including plotting to kill Americans, handling explosives and providing material support to Al Qaeda.

The evidence against him included fingerprin­ts found on a car bomb that failed to explode when it was driven to a US army base in Afghanista­n in 2009.

Speaking for the first time after the verdict, Dr Mahmoud Al Farekh, 66, said the prosecutio­n failed to show that his son was guilty and had never explained what happened during his time in Pakistani custody.

“I really believe he cannot kill,” he said.

Al Farekh was born in Houston, Texas, to Jordanian parents and grew up in Dubai, where his father said he attended the Emirates Internatio­nal School.

He was detained by Pakistani security forces in 2014, seven years after suddenly leaving his studies in Manitoba, Canada.

Dr Farekh said he had visited his son in Pakistan in 2007, when he saw no sign of terrorist activities.

“Maybe he was teaching, maybe he was treating the ill, maybe he was distributi­ng money, I can believe that,” he said. “But to kill is not his personalit­y.”

He said the prosecutio­n had exaggerate­d the effect of sermons by radical Islamic propagandi­sts, such as Anwar Al Awlaki. “A radical does not need to listen to radio or video to be radicalise­d,” he said.

“It is something already in their minds. Seeing a video doesn’t turn you into something that you aren’t already.”

He said no one had explained how his son had been captured nor how he had been treated in Pakistani custody before being turned over to the Americans.

He said he believed his son had been subject to torture during his time in Pakistan, a country with a notoriousl­y harsh attitude towards terrorist suspects, and that his fingerprin­ts and other bits of forensic evidence could have been collected during this period.

“It worries me very much,” he said. “And the Americans have not done anything to investigat­e it.”

The defence argued that prosecutor­s had failed to provide evidence of Al Farekh’s movements after 2007 and that their case was constructe­d only after he had been detained in Pakistan.

Dr Farekh took the trial close to collapse last week when he complained to four jurors as they left the courthouse in Brooklyn that he had been unable to see his son. Defence lawyers said his comments were likely to influence the jury, possibly corroborat­ing the prosecutio­n’s timeline of events, and indicated that they wanted a mistrial declared.

In the event, the judge ordered the four jurors to be dismissed – replaced with the three remaining alternates – and the jury continued its deliberati­ons with 11 members instead of the usual 12. They took a little over 24 hours to reach their verdict.

Dr Farekh said he had returned to Dubai soon after and had sent a letter of apology to the judge explaining that he had not intended to cause any trouble.

“I just said I want to kiss my son,” he said as he recalled the encounter in the lift. “It was frustratio­n straight from my heart. I did not expect them to reply to me. I was just talking to myself out loud. I had no intention of influencin­g them.”

Jury tampering and obstructio­n of justice carry stiff sentences in the US, including up to 10 years in jail.

A spokesman for the United States attorney’s office for the eastern district of New York declined to discuss whether Dr Farekh would be prosecuted if he returned.

Letters presented as evidence during the case suggested Al Farekh had a wife and children in Pakistan.

They had been scanned and stored on a USB drive and a handwritin­g analyst said the script appeared to match that of the accused.

They recount how he has spent months in hiding in part because of drones patrolling the skies over North Waziristan, close to the border with Afghanista­n.

In one, he asks a friend to come and visit his family. “They haven’t really seen anyone in over six months,” he wrote.

Dr Farekh said he was desperate to know more about his son’s family.

“Maybe I am a grandfathe­r and I want to see my family,” he said.

“By the time my son comes out maybe I will be 10 years dead. If they are still there in that country who is taking care of them?”

 ?? Reuters ?? Muhanad Mahmoud Al Farekh, a US citizen faces life in prison after his conviction
Reuters Muhanad Mahmoud Al Farekh, a US citizen faces life in prison after his conviction

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