The US State Department is offering a $5 million (about Sh508
million) reward for information on the whereabouts of an American
citizen said to be a leader of al-Shabaab's bomb-making operations.
Renewed
attention to the reward, first posted in 2013, came as prosecutors in
California unsealed on Monday a previously secret set of criminal
charges against Jehad Serwan Mostafa, a 37-year-old US native described
as a long-time leading figure in al-Shabaab.
“We
believe this defendant is the highest-ranking US citizen fighting
overseas with a terrorist organisation,” said Robert Brewer, the top
federal prosecutor in southern California.
“Al-Shabaab’s
reign of terror threatens US national security, our international
allies and innocent civilians,” Mr Brewer added.
“Today we seek the public’s assistance in capturing Mostafa and disrupting Al-Shabaab.”
Special
FBI Agent Scott Brunner specifically called for the assistance of East
Africans in locating Mostafa, who is believed to be based in southern
Somalia.
Mostafa, who is on the FBI's Most Wanted Terrorist list, was
raised in San Diego and attended high school and college in southern
California.
He left San Diego in 2005 and traveled
first to Yemen and then to Somalia where he took part in fighting
against Ethiopian troops, Mr Brunner recounted.
Mostafa
has been involved with Shabaab as a media specialist, a trainer of
recruits and a participant in attacks on African Union soldiers and
Somali government forces.
The FBI said it learned this year that Mostafa has taken on a leadership role in al-Shabaab's explosives department.
"He
has been working to improve the effectiveness of improvised explosive
devices and has used IEDs as “a tool of terror," US authorities stated.
If
convicted of the charges pending in a federal court in California,
Mostafa could be sentenced to 55 years in prison and be required to pay
$750,000 (about Sh76 million) in fines.
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