US Muslim charity leader sentenced to 65 yrs for Hamas support

(AFP)

27 May 2009 


 

 

 

 

 

DALLAS, Texas - The leader of what was once the largest Muslim charity in
the United States was sentenced to 65 years in jail Wednesday for supporting
Palestinian militants, in a major US-based terrorism financing case. 

The Texas-based Holy Land Foundation and five of its leaders were convicted
late last year of funneling more than 12 million dollars to Hamas. 

Jurors returned guilty verdicts on 108 charges of providing material support
to terrorists, money laundering and tax fraud. 

Skukri Abu Baker, whose brother Jamal Issa is the head of Hamas operations
in Yemen, was Holy Land's chief executive officer and the first to be
sentenced. 

Holy Land cofounder Mohamed El-Mezain, who is related to Hamas deputy
political leader Mousa Abu Marzook, was sentenced to 15 years in jail. 

Three other Holy Land organizers were expected to receive their sentences
later Wednesday. 

The Holy Land case was a major victory in the "war on terror" of former
President George W. Bush. 

Holy Land was one of several Muslim organizations the Bush administration
shut down in the wake of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks for
allegedly raising money for overseas Islamic extremists. 

Muslim charities that remained open reported significant drops in
contributions because of fears of prosecution even as juries deadlocked on
the Holy Land case and rendered acquittals and convictions of lesser charges
in two other high-profile terror financing cases in Florida and Chicago. 

The Justice Department vowed in October 2007 to retry the five Holy Land
leaders after jurors could not agree on verdicts on nearly 200 charges and a
new jury was seated in mid-September. 

Prosecutors took about two months to present evidence that Holy Land was
created in the late 1980s to gather donations from deep-pocketed American
Muslims to support the then-newly formed Hamas movement resisting the
Israeli occupation. 

Hamas - a multi-faceted Islamist political, social and armed movement which
controls the Gaza Strip in the Palestinian territories - was designated a
terrorist organization by the United States in 1995 and the trial centered
over whether Holy Land continued to support the group after this point. 

Prosecutors did not accuse the charity of directly financing or being
involved in terrorist activity. Instead, they said humanitarian aid was used
to promote Hamas and allow it to divert existing funds to militant
activities. 

Defense attorneys said the charity was a non-political organization which
operated legally to get much-needed aid to Palestinians living in squalor
under the Israeli occupation and argued that their clients were on trial
chiefly because of their family ties. 

Receiving sentences later Wednesday are: Holy Land fundraiser Mufid
Abdulqader, brother of Hamas political leader Khalid Mishal; Holy Land board
chairman Ghassan Elashi, and Abdulrahman Odeh, Holy Land's New Jersey
representative.

 

 
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