Daily Press

Dutch mom gets 3 years for supporting Somali militants

- By Matthew Barakat

ALEXANDRIA — A Dutch woman was sentenced to three years in prison Monday for donating several hundred dollars to a group that supported the militant group al-Shabab in Somalia.

The sentenced imposed on Farhia Hassan, 38, was far less than the 8-year sentence sought by prosecutor­s.

She was convicted this year by a jury at

U.S. District Court in Alexandria of conspiring to provide material support to terrorists.

Prosecutor­s said she was one of about 15 women who gathered in an online chatroom and regularly committed small amounts of money to support al-Shabab militants in Somalia and Kenya. In all, prosecutor­s say she donated about $300 over a three-year period, though they admitted difficulty tracking payments.

Hassan, a Somali native and mother of six, was granted asylum in the Netherland­s as a teenager and settled in the city of Terneuzen. She was initially charged in 2014, but fought extraditio­n for seven years before she was brought to the U.S. to face trial.

Two leaders of the group have already been convicted and sentenced to terms of 12 and 11 years, respective­ly.

Hassan’s lawyers argued she never should have been charged. They said it was overreach for the U.S. to charge a Dutch woman for supporting Somali militants when she had no connection whatsoever to the U.S.

While al-Shabab has been designated a terrorist organizati­on by the U.S., it carried no such designatio­n in the Netherland­s or the European Union at the time the group was active, from 2011-14.

Defense lawyers Jessica Carmichael and Yancey Ellis also said the minimal contributi­ons attributed to their client warranted only a minimal sentence.

They argued for a sentence of time served, about nine months.

“Ms. Hassan has been punished enough,” they wrote in sentencing papers.

Prosecutor­s, though, said $300 can go a long way. In court papers, they said the money could be used in Somalia to pay an al-Shabab fighter’s monthly wages or buy an AK-47 military rifle or a camel.

At Monday’s hearing, Hassan said through an interprete­r that she is not an al-Shabab supporter but was donating money to help the Somali people.

Prosecutor­s, though, said those who participat­ed in the online chats regularly heard lectures supporting suicide attacks and assassinat­ion of clerics, among other violent acts.

“Every indication before the Court is that she believes just as firmly in al-Shabaab’s mission as she did in 2011 when the conspiracy began,” prosecutor Danya Atiyeh wrote.

Judge Anthony Trenga, who imposed the sentence, said he largely agreed about Hassan’s radicaliza­tion. But he said Hassan’s actions did not merit imposition of a so-called “terrorism enhancemen­t” that usually results in extreme increases to the recommende­d term under federal sentencing guidelines.

Hassan can appeal her conviction and sentence.

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Hassan

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