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St. Paul, December 10,
2008 – Khalifo Shali said she has heard the talk that her 21-year-old
son joined the insurgents in his homeland.
While it is true Abdul Mohamud left St. Paul for Somalia last month,
Shali said he went for medical reasons -- not to become a terrorist.
"My son is sick. He [will go] on a little vacation and maybe visit his
family."
Shali said her son has struggled with bipolar disorder for years.
With his doctor's blessing, she sent him to back his homeland for three
months to visit relatives and seek traditional medicine.
Mahir SherifHer husband, Dahir Guled, said rumors are feeding rumors in
the Somali community about the missing men. And he's worried the
allegations will forever damage his stepson's name, and maybe those of
others who have gone back to their homeland for other reasons.
"People making allegations are a disease, actually. They spread rumors
without proof," Guled said.
Their son attended a storefront mosque called Islamic Da'wah Center.
Monday, on the Muslim holiday Eid al-Adha, worshippers said their
prayers on a red carpet along rows marked by masking tape.
The mosque leader, Imam Hassan Mohamud, said the reports of missing men
have put a cloud over the holiday. He had to postpone a big feast
because he was busy answering calls and talking to other imams about the
issue.
"They disrupted our Eid. People are living in fear instead of
happiness."
Khalifo ShaliMohamud has even heard of others accusing his mosque of
recruiting and training men to fight overseas. He said that claim may
have affected yesterday's fund-raising for the mosque, on a traditional
day of giving.
"As a community, we have to be responsible. If there is any son that was
sent to violence, we need to see the proof," Mohamud said.
Mohamud said many people travel between the United States and Somalia
for business and work. Some parents even send their children back to
their native country for a few months to escape the gang life and other
urban ills of the Twin Cities.
The Somali community in Minnesota is hardly monolithic. They left a
country torn by civil war, without a functional government in 17 years.
And as Americans, they are still divided by the varying political
opinions and tribal lines that defined their differences in their
homeland.
The case of the missing men is just one example where politics are
confusing the situation.
Omar Jamal helped organize the weekend news conference bringing
attention to the missing men. He says through reports from family
members, he knows of about 20 cases over the past two years, including
six men who left Minneapolis on November 4.
"We believe those parents are not lying to us. We know for a fact that
they're missing. We know they've gone to Somalia to fight," Jamal said.
Jamal thinks they were brainwashed by an unknown group who also financed
their trips.
Those reports are apparently attracting attention from federal
authorities. The FBI has not officially confirmed any investigation, but
a spokesman told the Associated Press that the agency is aware of a
number of Somali-American men who have gone to Somalia to "potentially
fight for terrorist groups."
The Associated Press reports that one man from Minneapolis is believed
to have killed himself and about 20 others in an Oct. 29 suicide bombing
in northern Somalia.
Another spiritual leader defended his mosque against the rumors at the
Minneapolis Convention Center.
In front of thousands who gathered to celebrate the holiday, Sheikh
Abdirahman Ahmed held a news conference to dispel rumors that his
mosque, Abubakar As-Saddique, recruited men to fight.
Ahmed was denied permission to board a plane last month to the Middle
East for an annual pilgrimage. Ahmed's attorney, Mahir Sherif said Ahmed
was apparently put on the federal no-fly list as a precautionary
measure.
Some of the missing men attended the mosque.
"It appears to me, that the FBI took the ball, based on the rumors, and
ran with it. In other words, put people on the no-fly, and [then engage]
in the hard detective work of having to talk to people," Sherif said.
Murshid Barud, 28, of Eden Prairie said he hopes investigators can
finish their work and put the unsubstantiated rumors aside.
Source:Agencies
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