Two Swedes, Somali plead guilty in NY over Shebab conspiracy

Two Swedes and a Somali, handed to the FBI more than two years ago in Africa, pleaded guilty on Tuesday to conspiring to aid the Al-Qaeda-linked Shebab group in Somalia, US prosecutors said.

New York: Two Swedes and a Somali, handed to the FBI more than two years ago in Africa, pleaded guilty on Tuesday to conspiring to aid the Al-Qaeda-linked Shebab group in Somalia, US prosecutors said.

The trio face up to 15 years in an American prison and deportation, prosecutors said in New York.

Prosecutors say Madhi Hashi, 25, from Somalia, and Swedes Ali Yasin Ahmed, 30, and Mohamed Yusuf, 32, were members of the Shebab militant group in Somalia from December 2008 to August 2012.

Shebab is blacklisted as a foreign terrorist organization in the United States and federal prosecutors have spearheaded efforts to try foreign terror cases in New York courts in recent years.

Shebab has claimed responsibility for some of the worst terror attacks in East Africa, including an April massacre at a Kenyan university that killed 148 people.

The Swedes fought against US-funded African Union forces in Somalia, prosecutors said. Hashi was close to Omar Hammami, the US-born public face of Shebab who was killed by fellow fighters in 2013, they added.

Yusuf appeared in a Shebab video to encourage recruits to travel to Somalia and join the group, and threatened a cartoonist who depicted the Prophet Mohammed -- considered blasphemous to many Muslims.

US officials said the men were arrested by local authorities in East Africa en route to Yemen in August 2012, then handed over to the FBI in November 2012 and flown to New York to be prosecuted.  

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