A lawmaker just called his own government a “fraud pipeline,” and the fallout could upend thousands of lives. He says U.S. taxpayers are
bankrolling a criminal machine. He claims the same networks looting Somalia are now embedded in American welfare programs.
As Trump officials move to expel Somali TPS holders, a brutal question looms: who exactly has been protec… Continues…
Dr. Abdillahi Hashi Abib’s charge is stark: what Americans see as scattered scandals are, in his view, only the visible tip of a system built to steal.
Drawing on internal expenditure data and his work on Somalia’s Foreign Affairs Committee, he portrays a state where aid is siphoned through family-owned fronts,
where tax laws are bent for insiders, and where disaster agencies allegedly serve as engines of profit rather than relief. His letters accuse specific
officials of turning hunger into a revenue stream, documenting millions in “consulting fees” and sudden luxury for men once publicly known to be penniless.
These revelations collide with a hardened U.S. posture. As the Trump administration ends Temporary Protected Status for
Somalis and touts an aggressive crackdown on Minnesota-based fraud, the narrative shifts from compassion to suspicion.
Abib’s warning cuts both ways: a plea to stop financing corruption abroad,
and a grim reminder that the innocent will be swept up alongside the guilty.