Mosque
leader criticizes hearing on terrorist link
(Minneapolis.
March 13, 2009 Ceegaag Online)
A leader of a Minneapolis mosque on Thursday criticized
testimony at a U.S. Senate hearing that indirectly linked it
to a terrorist group's recruitment of young Somali men from
the city.
Farhan Hurre, director of the Abubkar As-Saddique Islamic
Center in south Minneapolis, rebuffed what he called
"finger-pointing and false allegations" at Wednesday's
hearing of the Homeland Security Committee.
At the hearing, Osman Ahmen, a representative of the
local Somali community, said his nephew, one of about 20
young men in the Twin Cities who disappeared, appears to
have made contact with a "minority group" at the mosque that
promotes extremist ideologies.
In an e-mail sent Thursday, Hurre replied: "We were
hoping, as all the Somali community in Minnesota, that this
hearing would give some answers to the tragic issue of the
Somali missing men. We were disappointed with some of the
testimonies presented in the hearing in which some
finger-pointing and false allegations were reiterated."
He noted that mosque officials weren't asked by the
Senate committee members to testify, adding, "if it were
about Abubakar Center, the committee would have called us to
Washington to testify."
Federal counter-terrorism officials at the hearing did
not specifically mention the mosque, but said Minneapolis
has become the focus of an FBI probe into the recruitment of
young Somali men by AlShabab, an Al-Qaida offshoot.
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