http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/special/terror/front/1090010.html

 

Yemeni merchants scoff at terrorism accusations



Associated Press 

SAN`A, Yemen -- Honey merchants in Yemen scoffed today at U.S. accusations
their businesses were fronts for moving arms and money for terror suspect
Osama bin Laden. Yemmen authorities were investigating the country's honey
firms after the United States said two honey businesses and a bakery in
Yemen were fronts for bin Laden's terror network, 

A government official said authorities were checking business licenses to
see if owners matched those cited by the United States as having ties to bin
Laden, the accused mastermind of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the
United States. 

An employee of one of the companies on the U.S. list, the Al-Nur Honey Press
Shops, dismissed as "ridiculous" the notion that the business was linked to
bin Laden. 

"We don't have any suspicious money or funds located abroad. And if they
have proof of suspicious funds, let them freeze it. We don't have any ties
to bin Laden and don't know him," said Nabil al-Hitad. 

In its latest clampdown, the U.S. Treasury Department on Friday moved to
freeze the assets of Al-Nur, Al-Hamati sweets bakeries and Al-Shifa Honey
Press for Industry and Commerce -- among 39 individuals and organizations
suspected of conducting or financing terror. 

Yemen has in the past cooperated with U.S. requests to freeze assets of
companies and people linked to terrorism. 

The United States said Al-Nur is owned by Muhammad Hamdi Sadiq al-Ahda and
that he was once imprisoned in Saudi Arabia for planning terrorist
activities there. 

Al-Hitad said Al-Nur is owned by Muhammad al-Hamati, who he said was
traveling in Saudi Arabia for business. Al-Hamati's name was on the Al-Nur
business license al-Hitad showed The Associated Press. The U.S. Treasury has
listed al-Hamati as an alias for al-Ahda. 

Yemen honey is considered among the best and most expensive in the world,
fetching at least $50 per kilogram, about 2.2 pounds. Al-Nur is a well-known
brand; its stores are simple places where different varieties are displayed
in variously sized jars. The honey shops also often sell other Yemeni
specialties such as perfume, incense and spices. 

Because of high demand in Yemen, the nation also imports honey from
countries including the United States. Several honey exporters in the United
States, who were contacted today, said they did not sell honey to the Yemen
companies listed by the United States with terrorist ties. 

Muhammad Saleh al-Ashmuri, of the Al-Shifa honey business, said he was the
owner and doesn't know bin Laden. 

"How is it possible that shops such as these belong to millionaire bin Laden
and we can't pay the electricity bill and rent for the shops?" 

The U.S. Treasury list said Al-Shifa Honey Press for Industry and Commerce
was owned by Mahmud Abu al-Fatuh Muhammad, who is linked to the Islamic
Cultural Institute in Milan, Italy. The institute, which appears in the U.S.
government's court case against bin Laden for the 1998 U.S. embassy bombings
in Africa, is considered the main "station house" for bin Laden's network in
Europe, used to move weapons, men and money around the world. 

Yemen is a poor and often lawless country at the southern tip of the Arabian
Peninsula. 



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