Man accused of Mali terror attack extradited to U.S.
NEW YORK – A man accused of taking part in attacks in Mali in 2015 that killed dozens of people, including an American aid worker, was extradited to the United States to face multiple terrorism charges in federal court in Brooklyn, authorities said Saturday.
The man, Fawaz Ould Ahmed Ould Ahemeid, 44, has pleaded guilty to related offenses in Mali, where he was sentenced to death. He arrived in the United States on Friday and appeared Saturday before a federal magistrate judge in Brooklyn, where he pleaded not guilty.
Ahemeid was ordered detained pending trial. The terms of the extradition and what it means for his sentence in Mali were not immediately clear.
In an indictment unsealed Saturday, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York charged Ahemeid with the murder of the American aid worker, Anita Ashok Datar, as well as providing material support to al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb – al-Qaida’s regional affiliate in North Africa – and related crimes.
Datar, a 41-year-old public health expert from Takoma Park, Maryland, was a guest at the Radisson Blu hotel in Bamako, Mali, on Nov. 20, 2015, when two armed men attacked the hotel, killing 20 people.
Prosecutors said Ahemeid masterminded the attack on behalf of the al-Qaida affiliate and a local militant group, al-Murabitoun.
According to the indictment, Ahemeid, a Mauritanian national, joined al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb around 2007.
Federal prosecutors said he planned and committed at least three major terrorist attacks against Western targets in Mali. On March 7, 2015, Ahemeid – armed with two assault rifles, a pistol and grenades – attacked a restaurant in Bamako. Five people were killed.
On Aug. 7, 2015, Ahemeid helped plan and carry out an attack on the Hotel Byblos in Sevare, Mali, in which 13 people were killed, including five United Nations workers, prosecutors said.
Ahemeid was arrested in Mali in 2016 and pleaded guilty in 2020 to charges in connection with the hotel and restaurant attacks.
According to an account of his sentencing in Mali, which was reported by Reuters, Ahemeid described the attacks in detail, saying he regretted nothing. He said he carried them out as revenge for cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad printed by French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo.