UPDATED ON:
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
 




US charity guilty of funding Hamas













The verdict came after Holy Land's first trial last year
ended in a mistrial
A US court has convicted a Muslim charity and five of its former leaders of all 
108 charges in the largest "terrorism" financing trial in US history.
The Texas jury reached its verdict on Monday after eight days of deliberations 
over whether the former Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development, once 
the largest US Muslim charity, had given money to the Palestinian group Hamas.
 
The charity, which was shut down seven years ago, was accused of giving more 
than $12m to support Hamas, which was designated a "terrorist organisation" in 
1995 by the US government.
 
The hour-long verdict, following a seven-week trial, came after a first trial 
ended in October 2007 with one man acquitted on 31 charges but jurors unable to 
agree on verdicts for others.
 
Several relatives of those convicted on Monday wept as the verdict was read out 
in the Dallas courtroom, with one woman shouting "my father is not a criminal".
 
Ghassan Elashi, Holy Land's former chairman, and Shukri Abu-Baker, the
charity's ex-chief executive, were convicted of a combined 69 charges, including

supporting a specially-designated "terrorist" organisation, money-laundering 
and tax fraud, The Associated Press reported.
Mufid Abdulqader and Abdulrahman Odeh were convicted on three counts of 
conspiracy, and Mohammed El-Mezain was convicted on one count of conspiracy to 
support a "terrorist organisation".
 
The Holy Land foundation itself was convicted on all 32 counts.
 
'Political' case
 
While prosecutors said the foundation raised money for Hamas they did 
not accuse the charity of directly financing or being involved in "terrorist" 
activity.
 





"When you're supposed to be able to face your accusers fully and against secret 
evidence and secret witness, I think that leads to reasonable doubt"
Lydia Gonzalez,
League of United Latin American CitizensProsecutors said the charity was 
spreading Hamas's ideology by funding schools, hospitals and social welfare 
programmes controlled by the group in the Palestinian territories, and 
permitting it to divert funds to the activities of fighters.
 
However, the charity's supporters said the government was politicising the case 
as part of its so-called war on terror and ignoring the foundation's charitable 
mission in providing aid to the poverty-stricken Palestinian territories.
 
Government officials had raided Holy Land's headquarters in December 2001, 
and George Bush, the US president, later announced the seizure of the charity's 
assets as "another step in the war on terrorism".
 
But defence lawyers said their clients had been put on trial partly because of 
their family ties to members of Hamas - Khaled Meshaal, Hamas's political 
leader exiled in Syria, is the brother of defendant Mufid Abdulqader.
 
Unidentified Israeli witness
 
Al Jazeera's Tom Ackerman, reporting from Dallas, Texas, where the court case 
took place, said a former US state department official testified that he was 
never told that Hamas directed the US charity during intelligence briefings.
 
But an unidentified Israeli witness told the court that the aid was funnelled 
through Hamas channels.
 
Lydia Gonzalez of the League of United Latin American Citizens, said the 
defendants did not get a fair trial.
 
"When you're supposed to be able to face your accusers fully and against secret 
evidence and secret witness, I think that leads to reasonable doubt."
Muslim groups say the prosecution has made American Muslims more hesitant to 
fulfil their religious obligation of helping the needy and the foundation's 
defenders accuse the government of selectively prosecuting the charity.
 
"The same charities that these guys gave to the American Red Cross is still 
giving to, the USAID is still giving to," Mustafaa Carroll of the Council on 
American-Islamic Relations, said.






 Source:

Al Jazeera and agencies






http://english.aljazeera.net/news/americas/2008/11/20081124212126642596.html









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