Wadih el-Hage

Wadih Elias el-Hage[1] (Arabic: وديع الحاج, Wadī‘ al-Ḥāj) (born July 25, 1960) is a Lebanese member of al-Qaeda, and naturalized American citizen, who is serving life imprisonment in the United States based on conspiracy charges for the 1998 United States embassy bombings. Born to a Maronite Catholic family, El-Hage converted to Islam while still in Lebanon in the 1970s. He emigrated to the United States, where he developed an interest in militant interpretations of Islamic theology while attending the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.

Wadih el-Hage
Born
Wadih Elias el-Hage (Arabic: وديع الحاج)

(1960-07-25) July 25, 1960
OccupationSecretary for Osama bin Laden
Spouse(s)April el-Hage
Children7

During the Soviet–Afghan War el-Hage traveled to Pakistan to work for a Saudi charity, returning to the US in 1985. He married 18 year old April Ray, an American citizen who had recently converted to Islam, gaining American citizenship in 1989.[2] Struggling financially, he decided to move his family to Quetta, Pakistan, but returned to run the Al Kifah Refugee Center in Brooklyn after the death of Mustafa Shalabi. While running the al-Kifah Refugee Center he met some of the extremists involved in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. At the time of their trial, he was in Sudan working as a secretary for Osama Bin Laden. In 1996 and 1997, after Bin Laden left Sudan for Afghanistan, el Hage worked in Nairobi, Kenya. Under the pretense of doing charity work, he organized the al-Qaeda network that planned the carried out the embassy bombing in Nairobi.[3]

El-Hage was indicted[4] and arrested in 1998, and convicted on all counts and sentenced[5] to life without parole in 2001. His sentence was overturned in 2008 because it was based on federal mandatory sentencing guidelines invalidated by the US Supreme Court in 2005.[6] He was re-sentenced to life without parole in 2013.[7] El-Hage and his co-defendants are currently in the supermax prison known as ADX Florence.[8]

Aliases or 'Kunya'

Wadih el-Hage is also known as "Abd'al Sabur" or "Abdel Saboor",[9] both different transliterations of Abdus Sabur. 'Kunya' is a way of saying 'nickname' in the Arabic language.

Life

El-Hage was born in a Maronite Christian family on 25 July 1960 in Sidon, Lebanon,[10] but grew up in Kuwait, where he converted to Islam. His family was so angered by his conversion that he was forced to leave home and was taken in by a Kuwaiti sheikh who paid for his education, including college.[11] He traveled to the United States for college. From 1978, he studied urban planning at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, then-named the University of Southwestern Louisiana.

El-Hage interrupted his schooling to travel to Afghanistan via Pakistan, although his lifelong physical disability prevented any direct participation in the fighting against the USSR, he instead worked for a Saudi charity called the Muslim World League. He was reportedly under Abdullah Yusuf Azzam, an important figure in the early history of al-Qaeda. El-Hage returned to his university in January 1985, graduating in 1986. He married an 18-year-old American Muslim named April and relocated to Arizona. There he held several low-wage jobs, including city custodian. He became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1989.[12]

Over the next few years, the el-Hage family traveled repeatedly to Pakistan, initially taking along his mother-in-law and her husband. In an interview with PBS Frontline, el-Hage's mother-in-law said, "I was the matron surgical nurse at an Afghan surgical hospital. Wadih did not actually fight, but acted as an educator. My husband went with Wadih to deliver textbooks and Qur'ans to the young people. It was a Jihad, a fight for Islam."

Background

At an Islamic conference in Oklahoma in December 1989, el-Hage met Mahmud Abouhalima, who was later convicted for his part in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. El-Hage's prosecutors say that Abouhalima told el-Hage to buy a .38 caliber revolver. El Sayyid Nosair used that revolver to kill Rabbi Meir Kahane.[13]

At some later point, el-Hage moved with his family to Arlington, Texas. He was called to the Brooklyn charity Alkifah Refugee Center, by the group's office in Tucson, via el-Hage's mosque in Arlington. Family members acknowledge that he was in contact with the Alkifah group, and say that he was called in to mediate a dispute. A week later, the group's leader, Mustafa Shalabi, was found stabbed to death in an apartment that he shared with Abouhalima. This murder is unsolved. El-Hage's family said that he cried when he heard that Shalabi was dead.

In January 1992, el-Hage was arrested for writing false checks. In the car with him was Marwan Salama, whose phone records show his contact with the conspirators of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.

Shortly thereafter, el-Hage moved his family to Sudan and worked as a secretary for Osama bin Laden, who operated a network of businesses and charities, some of them fronts, in East Africa at the time. El-Hage often travelled to Europe in this capacity. Prosecutors believe that el-Hage became a key aide to Bin Laden.

In 1994, his wife April convinced el-Hage to leave Sudan and stop working for Bin Laden's organization there. As his mother in law said, "April would have none of that. She is Muslim, but she is also American, and she wouldn't stand for it." However, prosecutors believe that el-Hage continued to work for bin Laden's organisation in Nairobi, Kenya. In Kenya, he became the director of Help Africa People, a Muslim charity organization, which Kenyan documents say helped control malaria. El-Hage also made money in the jewelry business. Prosecutors say that el-Hage was in contact in Kenya with Abu Ubaidah al-Banshiri, who was al-Qaeda's #2 member until his death in 1996. The badly wanted al-Qaeda suspect Fazul Abdullah Mohammed moved in and worked at the house as a secretary. A letter,[14] Mohammed Saddiq Odeh, admitted knowing el-Hage in Nairobi and said that el-Hage attended his wedding.

Arrest

ADX Supermax, Hage's current residence as of today.

The Nairobi house was raided on August 21, 1998. el-Hage himself was questioned two days later upon his return to Nairobi from Afghanistan. el-Hage's family says that he was told to leave Kenya. In September 1997, he returned to Arlington with his family; several accounts say that he sold all of his possessions to fund the trip. However, upon arriving in the United States, he was arrested on September 15, 1998.[15]

Before a grand jury, el-Hage denied knowing bin Laden and others accused of the embassy bombings. On 20 September, he was arrested for perjury, and has not been free since. The indictment for the bombings themselves was read on 7 October of that year.

Incarceration

Hage, Bureau of Prisons number 42393-054, is in Florence ADMAX USP.[16]

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2017-04-14. Retrieved 2017-02-21.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. "A Portrait of Wadih el-Hage, Accused Terrorist". Frontline.
  3. Atkins, Stephen E. (2008). 9/11 Encyclopedia. p. 148.
  4. Copy of indictment Archived 2001-11-10 at the Library of Congress Web Archives USA v. Usama bin Laden et al., Center for Nonproliferation Studies, Monterey Institute of International Studies
  5. Four embassy bombers get life Archived 2006-08-14 at the Wayback Machine, CNN.com, By Phil Hirschkorn, October 21, 2001 Posted: 10:58 AM EDT (1458 GMT)
  6. "Convictions upheld in U.S. embassy bombings in Africa". Reuters. 2008-11-24. Archived from the original on 2019-01-10. Retrieved 2019-01-10.
  7. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2017-02-15. Retrieved 2017-02-28.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  8. PBS article on el-Hage Archived 2017-09-15 at the Wayback Machine, updated 12 September 2001
  9. Bergen, Peter, "The Osama bin Laden I Know', 2006.
  10. Wadih El Hage Archived 2007-03-08 at the Wayback Machine at GlobalSecurity.org
  11. "Interviews - Mother-In-Law Of Wadih El Hage - Hunting for bin Laden". FRONTLINE.
  12. O. Zill, ‘A Portrait of Wadih El Hage, Accused Terrorist’, PBS, 12 September 2001. Archived 2017-09-15 at the Wayback Machine
  13. Cases > El Hage et al. Archived 2016-04-27 at the Wayback Machine
  14. Letter to El-Hage Archived 2017-12-08 at the Wayback Machine, PBS, 2001
  15. Benjamin, Daniel & Steven Simon. The Age of Sacred Terror, 2002
  16. "Wadih el-Hage Archived 2011-06-04 at the Wayback Machine." Federal Bureau of Prisons. Retrieved on January 5, 2010.
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