Subject: MILITANT MUSLIMS SEEK VIRGINIA BASE
From: “Ajacoub@aol.com”
<Ajacoub@copticdigest.com
Date: Tue,
02 Jul 2002 01:41:39 -0400
RED
HOUSE, Va. — Militant American Muslims operating out of rural communes in
California and other Western states have targeted this rural Virginia community
for an influx of members who have ties to Middle Eastern terrorists.
Law-enforcement
authorities said the Muslims — mostly converts — are expected to join with
radical Muslims living on 45 acres in this small Charlotte County community, 25
acres near Meherrin in neighboring Prince Edward County and on other parcels of
land owned by the group’s members and supporters.
Muslims
in the Red House area have been negotiating to purchase an additional 100-acre
site in neighboring Campbell County, authorities said, adding that a number of
the radical group’s members also have purchased smaller lots in the region.
The
suspected Western exodus likely was sparked by the shutting down of Gateway
Academy Charter School in Fresno, Calif. The 12-school charter, established in
1998 by Khadijah Ghafur, a Muslim convert, was closed by school officials after
auditors found $1.3 million in public money was missing.
“They
had a tremendous funding source here that dried up,” said Dennis Peterson, an
investigator for the Fresno County District Attorney’s office. “They are no
longer on the candy wagon, and without that money it’s going to be tough
times.”
The
California group numbers between 200 and 400 people, and members lived on a
1,000-acre tract in the Sierra Mountain foothills. Guarded by an armed post at
the entrance, the encampment — known as Baladullah, or “City of God” — was the
site of the International Quranic Open University, founded by Sheik Mubarik Ali
Shah Gilani as an educational arm of Muslims of America, a group he founded.
The
community drew the attention of local law-enforcement agencies last summer
after a man studying at the university, Ramadan Abdullah, was arrested and
charged in the slaying of a Fresno County sheriff’s deputy.
Trial in
the case is pending.
Signs
posted last week at the Baladullah compound announced the pending withdrawal:
“Everything must go,” said one of the placards in announcing a yard sale.
Several of the homes at the site were deserted.
Tulare
County Sheriff’s Lt. Greg Langford told the Fresno Bee he was told by some
families at the compound that they would be gone by July.
The Red
House and Meherrin Muslims, who number between 200 and 300 people, including
women and children, have been linked to various money-laundering operations and
weapons violations, and are believed to have aided and abetted various
terrorist groups, authorities said.
Annual
Holy Days gatherings at the Red House site, operated by Muslims of America,
have drawn between 400 and 500 people from around the region.
Law-enforcement
authorities said they believe radical Muslims are seeking to create a patchwork
of “hide-outs” in rural southern Virginia for would-be terrorists and other
extremists. They said the sanctuaries have been established to follow the
teachings of Sheik Gilani.
Sheik
Gilani is a Pakistani cleric who founded the tax-exempt Muslims of America in
1980, which is linked to Jamaat al-Fuqra, a terrorist group committed to waging
jihad, or holy war, against the United States.
In addition
to providing safe harbor for an unknown number of American Muslims faithful to
Sheik Gilani, authorities believe members of Jamaat al-Fuqra are involved in
laundering money bound for Pakistan.
“We know
these places have become hide-outs for some of the organization’s most violent
members,” said one law-enforcement official. “The faces of those we have seen
in the communities are continually changing. It’s unclear who’s there at any
given time and what they’re doing.”
Wall Street
Journal reporter Daniel Pearl was on the way to meet Sheik Gilani in Pakistan
when he was kidnapped and later killed. Mr. Pearl was investigating accusations
that shoe-bomb suspect Richard C. Reid was one of Sheik Gilani’s followers.
Sheik Gilani was not charged in Mr. Pearl’s death.
Sheik
Gilani’s followers have set up rural encampments throughout the United States
and Canada that federal authorities believe are linked to murders, bombings and
other felonies. It is not clear to authorities where the organization gets its
funding, other than a few local odd
jobs by
group members.
One of
the Red House Muslims, Vicente Pierre, was convicted in November of two felony
firearms violations. Three other members of the Red House commune have been
arrested on weapons charges in the past year, including two after the September
11 attacks.
During a
September detention hearing for Pierre, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms
agent Tom Gallagher described al-Fuqra as a “violent, black Muslim extremist
sect that acts out jihads against perceived enemies.”
The
State Department has said al-Fuqra seeks to purify Islam through violence.
Authorities
said the FBI notified California law-enforcement agencies in the early 1990s,
asking them to keep an eye on the Muslim community in the Sierra foothills.
Last year,
U.S.
marshals arrested James Hobson, who was visiting Baladullah, on a firearms
warrant out of South Carolina, where al-Fuqra has another encampment.
The case
of the missing school funds in California is similar to an operation the group
had in Colorado, which was shut down in 1993 by state law-enforcement
officials. Five al-Fuqra members were convicted of defrauding the Colorado
government of approximately $350,000 through bogus worker’s compensation
claims.
Muslims of
America claims to be nonviolent, saying in a recent statement that Sheik Gilani
“does not condone nor teach us to condone violence, especially against the
innocent.”
Raids by
police in 1992 and 1993 on a 101-acre Muslim commune in central Colorado turned
up bombs, automatic weapons, ammunition and plans for terrorist attacks. At
least
two of the communes — in New York and California —have shooting ranges.
This
article was mailed from The Washington Times