Wife of Daesh leader jailed for 8 years in Somalia over terror fund transfers
Wife of Daesh leader jailed for 8 years in Somalia over terror fund transfers/node/2241761/world
Wife of Daesh leader jailed for 8 years in Somalia over terror fund transfers
Police officers stand near the bodies of alleged Al-Shabaab militants who have been killed after the siege at the Mogadishu Municipality Headquaters in Mogadishu on January 22, 2023. (AFP/File)
Wife of Daesh leader jailed for 8 years in Somalia over terror fund transfers
Fartun Abdirashid, wife of Abdiqadir Mumin, head of the Daesh group, was sentenced on Monday at a military court
Updated 30 January 2023
AP
MOGADISHU: A military tribunal in Somalia has sentenced the wife of the head of a terrorist organization linked to Daesh to eight years in prison for passing on information and organizing financial transactions for the group, a military official said on Monday.
Fartun Abdirashid, wife of Abdiqadir Mumin, head of the Daesh group, was sentenced on Monday at a military court.
She has been under custody since her arrest in March last year in the capital, Mogadishu.
Abdirashid was accused of frequently transferring $100 to $200 to the group’s members, the public prosecutor’s office said.
She had a working relationship with Bilal Al-Sudaani, a senior Daesh official who was killed on Wednesday in a US raid in Somalia’s northern Bari region.
Mumin, a former Al-Shabab cleric, pledged his allegiance to Daesh leader Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi in 2015.
Daesh holds a smaller footprint in Somalia compared to the Al-Shabab terrorist group that has carried out numerous attacks in the country.
Somalia’s forces are carrying out an offensive against Al-Shabab that has been described at the most significant in more than a decade.
The first US Cabinet member to visit Somalia since 2015 urged the world’s distracted donors to give immediate help to a country facing deadly famine, which she calls “the ultimate failure of the international community.”
Costa Rica’s Grynspan pledges reform in bid for UN chief job
Updated 3 sec ago
GENEVA: Rebeca Grynspan is upbeat about her chances of becoming the next head of the United Nations, which she insists must become more agile in tackling the world’s crises. The Costa Rican former vice president said she wanted to rebuild global trust in the United Nations if she becomes its next secretary-general. “We are very optimistic. I think that I am more than a viable candidate,” Grynspan said on Friday, her last working day before stepping aside as head of the UN trade and development agency UNCTAD to focus on her campaign. The second term of current UN chief Antonio Guterres expires at the end of the year. “My profile is right for this moment. I know the UN enough to reform it and enough to defend it,” she told the UN correspondents’ association ACANU. “I have a lot of experience in my political life, taking decisions under a lot of stress and in complex situations. I have been in the highest positions in the UN.” It is Latin America’s turn next for the top UN job and two other candidates are running: former Chilean president Michelle Bachelet, and Rafael Grossi, the Argentinian head of the International Atomic Energy Agency. Founded in 1945, the UN has never had a woman secretary-general. Grynspan, an economist, is not looking to be chosen on that basis. “I don’t need any favors to be elected for the secretary-general; I just need people not to discriminate me for being a woman,” the 70-year-old said. “If the competition will be fair, with no biases, I will make it. I have the CV; I have the merits.”
- Rebuilding trust -
Last month, Guterres warned that the UN was facing financial collapse and could run out of cash by July, with member states neither paying in full nor or time. “The UN has to change,” said Grynspan. There are far greater capacities in civil society and the private sector than in 1945, “and we need to be able to harness that: we don’t have to do everything in the UN.” As for peace and security, “prevention and mediation are essential. But they need agility and flexibility from the structures of the UN. And I don’t think we have that right now.” US President Donald Trump has slashed funding to some UN agencies and has repeatedly questioned the UN’s relevance and attacked its priorities, setting up his own “Board of Peace.” “The UN is unique because it’s the only legitimate, universal organization,” said Grynspan. “We need to rebuild trust with the member states. We need to regain the belief that the UN is useful to solve problems,” she said, vowing to bring her personal qualities to the task. “I am able to reach to people not only with logic, but also with inspiration, optimism and hope,” she said. “We need more of that too, because we need to connect again much more with people. We will need to conquer the hearts and minds again.”
- Leadership style -
The UNCTAD chief said her leadership style revolved around being “direct, honest, and evidence-based... There have to be reasons, not only emotions.” Grynspan recounted that her parents, who were from Poland, “barely survived” World War II. Her maternal grandparents were killed in the Holocaust. Her parents went “with nothing” to Costa Rica, a country that “allowed them to have a good life.” “Costa Rica has taught me a lot. It’s a country that I not only love dearly, but I admire,” she said. “I am not an impetuous person. I think things through. I have the serenity not to lose it under tension and under pressure. I consult. I hear. And I am brave. I take risks.” rjm/ceg