The National - News

Al Qaeda terrorist convicted for role in US army base attack

- ROB CRILLY

An American captured in Pakistan faces life in prison after being convicted for his role in an Al Qaeda attack on a US army base in Afghanista­n in 2009.

A jury in New York took a little over 24 hours to convict Muhanad Mahmoud Al Farekh, 31, who grew up in Dubai, of nine charges, including using explosives, conspiring to murder Americans and supporting a foreign terrorist organisati­on.

Farekh’s fingerprin­ts were recovered from a car bomb that failed to detonate in the attack on Forward Operating Base Chapman in Khost province.

Bridget Rohde, acting US attorney for the eastern district of New York, which brought the case, said: “The jury’s verdict on all nine counts of the indictment establishe­d Farekh’s responsibi­lity for a violent attack on members of our armed forces, his efforts to murder Americans and his commitment to one of the world’s most infamous terrorist organisati­ons.”

Prosecutor­s described how he was influenced by the radical teachings of Anwar Al Awlaki, an Al Qaeda propagandi­st, while a student in Canada. He and two friends left the University of Manitoba in 2007 to travel to Pakistan.

At one point, he was believed to have risen to such a senior role in Al Qaeda, under the nomme de guerre of Abdullah Al Shami, that US officials considered adding him to a drone kill list. He was detained by Pakistani security forces in 2014 and handed to American agents a year later.

Speaking outside the courthouse during the trial, his father insisted that his son was innocent.

“The prosecutor­s have proved nothing,” said Mahmoud Al Farekh, who lives in Dubai. “I went to see him in Pakistan. He was sightseein­g, a tourist. We went to look at a university.”

But Farekh was convicted on all nine charges he faced when the jury delivered its verdict on Friday. Judge Brian Cogan ordered him to return on January 11 for sentencing.

“We believe there were legal errors contributi­ng to this conviction,” said Al Farekh’s lawyer, David Ruhnke. “We will appeal.”

William Sweeney, FBI assistant director, said criminals would be held accountabl­e no matter where their crimes were committed. “Today’s verdict is justice for the harm and destructio­n Farekh intended to cause when he conspired with others to bomb a US military base in Afghanista­n,” he said.

Much of the evidence presented in court came from the attack on Forward Operating Base Chapman. Two vehicles loaded with explosives were driven at the camp gates.

“The attack plan was evidently for the first vehicle to detonate at the gate so that the second vehicle – a truck following closely behind that was carrying significan­tly more explosive ordnance than the first vehicle – could enter FOB Chapman and detonate inside the base to maximise casualties and damage,” read the government complaint against Farekh.

In the event, only the first detonated – injuring several Afghans, including a pregnant woman, but avoiding the worst.

Investigat­ors recovered more than 3,400 kilograms of explosives from the second vehicle.

“The effect would have been catastroph­ic,” said Douglas Pravda, US assistant attorney, in his closing statement, explaining how the device would have had a range of more than 1,000 metres.

He described how 18 sets of fingerprin­ts matching the

Today’s verdict is justice for the harm and destructio­n Farekh intended to cause WILLIAM SWEENEY FBI assistant director

suspect were recovered from brown packing tape used to assemble the bomb.

In contrast, the defence said prosecutor­s had done nothing to prove Farekh’s whereabout­s in the years after his departure from the University of Manitoba and that the fingerprin­t evidence did not mean he was responsibl­e for assembling the bomb.

Jury deliberati­ons were briefly halted on Thursday when it emerged than Farekh’s father had approached jury members as they left court in a lift.

He complained that he had not had an opportunit­y to see his son in years. Defence lawyers said they feared his words would prejudice the jury against their client, supporting the case that Farekh had cut ties with his family during the time he worked for Al Qaeda.

Mr Cogan ordered that four jurors be replaced by the remaining three alternativ­es, and then instructed the 11-strong jury to begin its deliberati­ons anew.

 ?? Reuters ?? Muhanad Mahmoud Al Farekh, 31, an American citizen, grew up in Dubai and was detained in Pakistan
Reuters Muhanad Mahmoud Al Farekh, 31, an American citizen, grew up in Dubai and was detained in Pakistan

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