US Slaps Sanctions on Alleged New ISIS Financiers

The United States on Monday imposed sanctions on
financiers with bases in Belgium, Kenya and Turkey on charges they funneled
money internationally for the ISIS extremist group, reported AFP.
The Treasury Department said it had pinpointed
successors to Fawaz Muhammad Jubayr al-Rawi, who was killed in a US-led
coalition air strike in Syria in 2017 after allegedly sending millions of
dollars earmarked for the terrorists.
The United States imposed sanctions on seven people
including Mushtaq Talib Zughayr al-Rawi, who as of late 2018 was living with
his family in Belgium, according to the Treasury Department.
Forces seized evidence during a raid on the ISIS
group last year that showed Mushtaq was helping fund them by exploiting the
Iraqi government's electronic payment machines designed to distribute payments
to public employees and retirees, the Treasury Department said.
"Treasury is dedicated to ensuring the enduring
defeat of ISIS by cutting off all remaining sources of their terror funding
around the globe," said Sigal Mandelker, the department's undersecretary
for terrorism and financial intelligence.
Rawi's network dates from the 1990s in Iraq, when it
used the region's hawala system, the informal network of money transfers
conducted through face-to-face guarantees, to evade biting international
sanctions on the country then ruled by Saddam Hussein.
The Treasury Department also sanctioned a money
exchange company, Al-Ard Al-Jadidah, said to connect Iraq's hawalas with the
northern Turkish city of Samsun.
An ISIS member in Iraq allegedly received $1 million
through the exchange last year, it said.
Also targeted in the latest sanctions was
Kenya-based Halima Adan Ali, who the Treasury Department said was part of a
network that moved more than $150,000 through the hawala system to ISIS
fighters in Syria, Libya and central Africa.
She has been arrested twice by Kenyan authorities
and also served as a recruiter for Somalia's Al-Shabaab militants, according to
the Treasury Department.
With the announcement, the United States will seize
any assets it finds which belong to the sanctioned individuals and bar any Americans
from financial dealings with them.