'Fazul Abdullah Mohammed' (
Arabic: فاضل عبدالله محمد) (born
August 25,
1972,
February 25,
1974, or
December 25,
1974) is a suspected member of
al-Qaeda, sometimes purported to be the leader of their
East African presence. Mohammed was born in
Moroni,
Comoros Islands and has
Kenyan as well as Comorian citizenship. He speaks
French,
Swahili,
Arabic,
English, and
Comorian.
[1]
Role in al-Qaeda
Fazul Abdullah Mohammed and a number of others are under indictment
[2] in the United States for their alleged participation in the
1998 U.S. embassy bombings. Mohammed has been on the FBI's list of
most wanted terrorists since its inception on
October 10,
2001. At present the reward for finding Mohammed is
US$5 million.
[3][4]
In Kenya, Mohammed was once the secretary of, and lived in the same house as,
Wadih el Hage. El-Hage was indicted with Mohammed,
[5] and has been convicted. A letter to el-Hage, thought to be from Mohammed, was exhibited at el-Hage's trial.
[6]
Mohammed is suspected in Kenya of involvement in two attacks in
Mombasa on
November 26,
2002. One was the truck bombing of Paradise Hotel, in which 15 were killed. The other was the launch of two shoulder-fired missiles at an Israeli airliner on takeoff; the missiles missed and there were no casualties.
[CBS reports that Mohammed is wanted in Kenya, January 10, 2007]
On
May 26,
2004,
United States Attorney General John Ashcroft and
FBI Director Robert Mueller announced that reports indicated that Fazul Abdullah Mohammed was one of seven al-Qaeda members who were planning a terrorist action for the summer or fall of 2004.
[7] According to an FBI interrogation report, an associate of Mohammed confessed that the militant trained with al-Qaeda and
Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan.
[Al Qaeda militant killed CNN] Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, also on that list, was captured in Pakistan a month later. Soon thereafter, several press reports, claiming UN and official US sources, described the participation of several al-Qaeda personnel, including Mohammed and Ghailani, in the acquisition and movement of diamonds in Liberia.
[8]
When the ferry
MV Bukoba sank in
Lake Victoria in 1996, taking al-Qaeda co-founder
Abu Ubaidah al-Banshiri with it, Fazul Mohammed was one of the people sent to the scene by al-Qaeda, to try to verify that Abu Ubaidah was dead and had not in fact defected.
[9]
Suspected Involvement in Somali Conflict
In early 2007, during the
War in Somalia, Fazul Abdullah Mohammed was thought to be in the border area near
Ras Kamboni, along with remnants of the
Islamic Courts Union. On
January 8,
2007, a US Air Force
AC-130 gunship targeted al-Qaeda in the area. It is likely he was one of the targets as
The Pentagon has said the "target of the strike was the principal al-Qaeda leadership in the region."
[10][11][12] Somali government officials said that his death was confirmed in an intelligence report provided to Somali authorities by the United States.
[Al Qaeda militant killed CNN] However, in an interview with the
BBC, the US ambassador to Kenya,
Michael Ranneberger, denied that Mohammed had been killed in the airstrike, and stated that the search for the three al-Qaeda suspects continues.
[ Somali raids miss terror suspects ] Mohammed's remains, if they are found, can be identified by aid of a DNA sample taken in Comoros.
[c]
One of Mohammed's wives and her children were captured trying to escape to
Kenya from
Somalia. They were arrested in
Kiunga and brought to
Nairobi for questioning.
[13] Before Mohammed's wife was deported back to Somalia by the Kenyan government a computer in her possession thought to have been Fazul's was seized and was said to have "contained vital information on terrorism training and intelligence collection including spying".
[14] Mohammed is believed to "be very good with computers".
[3]
Current Whereabouts
While it was never confirmed that Mohammed escaped from the
fighting in
Somalia or had even been there when the violence broke out,
Madagascar's largest newspaper,
Midi Madagasikara reported in early February 2007 that Mohammed was now on the island nation. Quoting military and "other sources" the paper claimed he was in the city of
Majunga. A partner of his from the
Comoros now lives on the island.
[1]
Aliases
Throughout his career, he has used many aliases. As well, there are many alternate spellings of his name. Thus he may appear under the following different names in reports: Abdallah Fazul, Abdalla Fazul, Abdallah Mohammed Fazul, Fazul Abdilahi Mohammed, Fazul Adballah, Fazul Abdalla, Fazul Mohammed, Haroon, Harun, Haroon Fazul, Harun Fazul, Haroun Fazul,
[16] Fadil Abdallah Muhamad, Fadhil Haroun, Abu Seif Al Sudani, Abu Aisha, Abu Luqman, Fadel Abdallah Mohammed Ali, and Fouad Mohammed.
See also
★
War in Somalia (2006-present)
★
Battle of Ras Kamboni
References
1. Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, Federal Bureau of Investigation, US Department of Justice
2. Copy of indictment USA v. Usama bin Laden et al., Center for Nonproliferation Studies, Monterey Institute of International Studies
3. c
4. Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, Rewards for Justice Program, US Department of State
5. c
6. Letter to el-Hage, PBS, 2001
7. Transcript: Ashcroft, Mueller news conference, CNN.com, Wednesday, May 26, 2004 Posted: 8:19 PM EDT (0019 GMT)
8. Liberia's Taylor gave aid to Qaeda, UN probe finds, Boston Globe, August 4, 2004
9. Transcript of testimony in the trial of El Hage and others
10. U.S. launches new attacks in Somalia
11. Attacks against al-Qaeda continue in Somalia, MSNBC, 9 January 2007
12. Somali Government closes in on al-Qa'eda stronghold
13. Reuters report on FAM's wife
14. Kenya: We have hacked al-Qaida laptop, UPI, 30 January 2007
15. c
16. PBS story on FAM and al-Hage