A
35-year-old Nigerian, who once wrote rap lyrics for Al-Qaeda in Yemen, was
sentenced to 22 years in a US prison Wednesday after pleading guilty to terror
charges.
Lawal Olaniyi Babafemi, who was extradited to New York from
Nigeria, was jailed by Judge John Gleeson in a US federal court in Brooklyn,
prosecutors announced.
He was originally indicted in the United States on four counts
but pleaded guilty in April 2014 to providing and conspiring to provide support
to Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP).
He traveled to Yemen after “underwear bomber” and fellow
Nigerian Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab tried to blow up a US airliner on Christmas
Day 2009 with explosives stuffed down his pants.
Babafemi
made two trips to Yemen from Nigeria between January 2010 and August 2011 to
train with leaders of AQAP in the use of weapons and inspiring “lone-wolf”
style attacks overseas.
He helped with their English-language media operations,
including online magazine Inspire, in which he was photographed holding an
AK-47, according to court documents.
He wrote rap lyrics on behalf of AQAP, hoping to extend its
appeal to young Westerners, and was given nearly $9,000 in cash to recruit other
English speakers from Nigeria before he was arrested, then extradited to the
United States.
Underwear bomber Abdulmutallab, who also traveled to Yemen to
meet AQAP leaders, is serving a life sentence in America.
Washington considers Al-Qaeda’s franchise in Yemen as one of the
network’s most dangerous.
It has orchestrated several plots on Western targets and claimed
the January killings at French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo.
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