Dahabshiil
Home Articles Somali Songs About us  

Former soldier from Md. ordered held on charges that he tried to join
terrorist group

The Associated Press
Jan 12, 2012

GREENBELT, Md. — A former U.S. Army soldier accused of trying to provide support to a terrorist organization in Somalia after he left the military will remain locked up until his trial, a judge ruled Wednesday.

U.S. Magistrate Judge William Connelly rejected defense arguments that Craig Baxam was naïve and impulsive and simply exploring his religion when he left the United States for Somalia last month with the goal of joining al-Shabaab, a group designated as a foreign terrorist organization. He was picked up in neighboring Kenya before he could reach Somalia and was questioned by FBI agents.

“What is striking is that Mr. Baxam formed an intent to leave the country and not come back,” Connelly said, agreeing with prosecutors that Baxam was a flight risk and danger to the community.

Baxam, a 24-year-old Maryland man who joined the Army in 2007 and spent time in Iraq, converted to Islam last summer after reading an Islamic religious website and left the military about a week later, federal authorities say.

Baxam’s public defender, John Chamble, argued that his client wanted to practice his newly discovered Islam faith and was exercising his rights to free speech and religion. He said Baxam had naively “looked for religion in the wrong places.”

“We’ve got a young man six months into discovering his religion — untutored, untaught — trying to discover things for himself,” he said.

Baxam tried to keep his conversion a secret, and destroyed a home computer before he left for Africa because he did not want to leave a record of his activities, according to an FBI agent’s affidavit.

Baxam is charged with trying to provide support for a terrorist organization.

The affidavit said Baxam planned to migrate to the al-Shabaab-controlled areas of southern Somalia and told agents that he had planned to fight alongside the group if attacked by the United States or another democratic government. Authorities say he envisioned himself dying in Somalia and, asked what his role with al-Shabaab would be, said he would be “just another body there,” the complaint said.

He said that living as a Muslim in the United States was “oppressive” and found the “constant playing of music and constant display of pictures disrespectful,” the affidavit said.

Federal authorities say Baxam cashed out his savings of roughly $3,500 and used some of the money to buy a round-trip ticket to Kenya to arouse less suspicion. Once on the ground, he tried to use a combination of buses and taxis to take him to Somalia. He was detained after his bus was stopped by the Kenyan police.

Chamble argued that Baxam’s travels were basically directionless because he had never formulated a plan.

“There was no plan. He came with no weapon. He came with no significant money. He had no plan. He didn’t even know how to get there,” he said.

Chamble noted that there was no allegation that he had made contact with the terrorist group or that anyone else was involved in his decision to travel to Somalia. Had the former soldier actually made it to Somalia, “the more likely scenario is they would have put a bullet in his head.”

Source: AP

Copyright © 2012 WardheerNews.com