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Minnesota Woman Says Missing Son Killed In Somalia

Issue 390

Front Page

News Headlines

Somaliland Political Parties & Electoral Commission Agree On Code Of Conduct

Habsade Leads Delegation Of Las Anod Elders On Borama Visit

Somaliland Government Says Ceelbardaale Is A Military Zone

Somaliland Government Jails Horyaal Journalists & Suspends Horn Cable TV

Ministry Of Education Officials Questioned

Somaliland’s Community Leaders Appeal For Calm In Ceelbardaale

Islamic And Traditional Medicine In Somaliland

Mental Illness Center Receives $1500 Donation

Gaashan Defeats Nation Link In Basketball

Dahabshiil Employees Awarded Certificates After Receiving Training On Anti Money Laundering Compliance

Somaliland Government Accused Of Suffocating Freedom Of Speech

U.S. Urges Release Of Journalists In Somaliland

Local and Regional Affairs

Donors Threaten Somaliland With Funding Axe Unless It Replaces Election Commissioners

Clashes Displace Hundreds Of Families In Somaliland

Two Journalists Arrested Amid Growing Crackdown On Media – RSF

Somaliland: Fragile Democracy Under Threat

Letter To Congressman Donald M. Payne By The Somaliland Forum

Anti-racist football team member is killed in crash

Somalis In Britain Find Their Voice At Last

Somalia: Police detain a Chinese bicyclist

Funds For Basic Humanitarian Needs In Somalia Insufficient- Warns UN Humanitarian Agency

Kidnapped French Agents Held By Hardline Militia

French Hostages Given To Al Qaeda-Linked Somali Group

Tragic loss for FURD

Somali terrorism conspiracy case unsealed

Aid agencies need $11 million to provide water and sanitation to displaced Somalis – UN

Top UN envoy hopes for return to stability in Somali capital

Forgotten Somalia

Minnesota Woman Says Missing Son Killed In Somalia

Neighbors May Be Reaping From Somalia Unrest

Editorial

Time To Show That No One Is Above The Law

Features & Commentary

Somaliland: What Somalia Could Be

Somaliland's Addict Economy

A Call To Jihad, Answered In America

AFGHANISTAN: When the War is Unwinnable

NO AGREEMENT YET ON CLIMATE CHANGE FOR ASIA

The end of “de facto states”

Transport Delays For Food Aid Continue

Hillary Clinton's 6-Month Checkup

Praying For Return Of Mother Trapped 8 Weeks In Kenya

International News

 

South Africa Tests AIDS Vaccine

Powerful Iranian Cleric Says Country In Crisis

Iraq Restricts U.S. Forces

Opinion

How Foreigners and Some Somalis have Made Somalia A Pariah of the International Community

Somaliland Election's Formidable Challenges: Terrorism, Tribalism

Reflections Of Our Trip To Saudi Arabia

All African Borders Rose From Colonial Borders

Somaliland: A Democracy in the Horn of Africa.

MINNEAPOLIS, July 13, 2009 (AP) — A 20-year-old man believed by his family to have been killed in his native Somalia "had no clue" what the country was really like when he left his home in Minneapolis to fight there, his mother said Sunday.

Abayte Ahmed said through an interpreter Sunday that she and her husband, who live in Minneapolis, identified their son, Jamal Bana, in a photo on a Somali news website, Dayniile.com, showing a dead body in Somalia. Bana's father saw the photo Saturday morning during his daily check of news reports on the fighting in that country.

Bana was among a group of up to 20 young Somali men who left Minneapolis in recent years — disappearances under investigation by the FBI out of suspicion they were recruited by a radical Islamic terror group to fight in their homeland. Ahmed said her son disappeared from Minneapolis on Nov. 4.

Minneapolis FBI spokesman E.K. Wilson did not immediately return a call for comment Sunday. A day earlier, he said he could not confirm Bana's death.

Family members, who spoke to the media Sunday afternoon outside the south Minneapolis home where Bana grew up, said they had no doubt he was killed. After seeing the photo, family members said they spoke by phone to sources in Europe and Somalia who were able to confirm the death. The family did not identify the sources.

It wasn't clear exactly when Bana died, but the family believes it happened Friday, said Abdirizak Bihi, a Somali activist who spoke with Bana's family.

On Sunday, Ahmed wept through much of the news conference. Her remarks were interpreted by Omar Jamal, executive director of the Somali Justice Advocacy Center in Minneapolis, home to the largest Somali population in the United States.

"My son had no clue about Somalia," Ahmed said, without elaborating.

Somalia's last functioning government was overthrown in 1991, and since then the country has been fought over by packs of warlords. Ahmed said her son was only a year old when she and her husband left Somalia for the United States.

She said she heard from her son only once since he disappeared — a brief call on Nov. 15 in which he simply said, "I'm in Somalia" before hanging up.

She described her son as kind and said he had helped take care of his six younger siblings.

"Somebody must have put something in his mind," Ahmed said through Jamal. "He must have been disillusioned, indoctrinated."

Another young Somali man from Minneapolis, Shirwa Ahmed, is believed to have carried out a suicide bombing last October as part of a series of coordinated attacks that targeted a U.N. compound, the Ethiopian consulate and the presidential palace in Hargeysa, capital of the Somaliland region. FBI Director Robert Mueller said in February that the bomber had probably been "radicalized" in the Twin Cities.

In June, the Minneapolis family of another young Somali, Burhan Hassan, said they believed he had been killed and buried in Somalia.

The FBI has acknowledged its ongoing investigation into the disappearances but won't elaborate.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

USA Today


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