(Reuters) -
Kuwait briefly detained a prominent Sunni Muslim cleric less than two
weeks after the United States included him on a sanctions list on
suspicion he was funneling money to militants in Iraq and Syria, his lawyer said on Monday. Shafi al-Ajmi, who was detained on Sunday on the border with Saudi Arabia while returning home from a pilgrimage, was released after four hours of questioning, his lawyer said. "He was released without any charges," the lawyer, Mohammed al-Jumia, told Reuters. "He is now at home." Jumia
said he planned to file a lawsuit against the U.S. Treasury to lift his
client's name from its blacklist, but gave no further details. An Interior Ministry spokesman could not immediately be reached for comment. Kuwait has been one of the biggest humanitarian donors to Syrian refugees through the United Nations, but it has also struggled to control unofficial fundraising for opposition groups in Syria by private individuals. The
government of the U.S.-allied Gulf Arab state has stepped up its
monitoring of individuals and charities suspected of collecting
donations for militants linked to al Qaeda in Syria and in Iraq. On
Aug. 6, the United States imposed sanctions on Shafi and two other men
suspected of funneling money from Kuwait to Islamic State, the al Qaeda
splinter group that has seized swathes of territory in Iraq and Syria.
Washington also said the men had helped smuggle fighters to Afghanistan and Iraq. Last year, Kuwait banned a television show that Shafi appeared on, saying it incited hatred. As
well as calling for armed opposition to Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad, Shafi has called on supporters to torture and kill fighters in
Syria linked to the Lebanese Shi'ite group Hezbollah, evidence of how
the Syria conflict has aggravated Sunni-Shi'ite tensions across the
Middle East. Kuwaiti
Information Minister Sheikh Salman al-Humoud al-Sabah said at the time
that authorities would investigate how a show featuring the cleric was
allowed to be broadcast on state television. On
Friday, the U.N. Security Council imposed sanctions on six people
suspected of financing Islamist militants, including two Kuwaitis, in a
move aimed at weakening Islamic State and al Qaeda's Syrian wing, Nusra
Front. One of the
sanctioned Kuwaitis was identified as Hajjaj al-Ajmi, another prominent
Muslim cleric who belongs to the same extended tribe as Shafi al-Ajmi's.
Kuwait briefly detains Muslim cleric U.S. suspects of militant financing
Reuters
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