Metro

Visa rap on NYC terror dad

The father of a man who admitted plotting to bomb New York City subways has pleaded not guilty to visa-fraud charges.

Mohammed Wali Zazi entered the plea yesterday in federal court in Manhattan.

Zazi is the father of Najibullah Zazi, who pleaded guilty to terror charges in a foiled 2009 plot to attack the subways with two friends after they received al Qaeda training.

The elder Zazi, 55, was convicted in July in a separate case in Brooklyn accusing him of destroying evidence and lying about the subway terror plot.

Mohammed Zazi allegedly misled federal agents and destroyed bomb-making chemicals.

He also allegedly hid some glasses, masks and containers connected to the case.

Zazi, a US citizen, moved from New York to suburban Denver several years ago.

After the conviction, his attorney claimed Zazi didn’t destroy evidence or lie to the FBI and that his limited grasp of English led to a miscommunication.

After the conviction, Zazi told reporters “I’m innocent.”

The new charges accuse him of lying on immigration papers by saying his nephew was his son.

Najibullah Zazi, 26, was accused of buying beauty supplies in Colorado with the intention of mixing the chemicals in a hotel room and turning them into peroxide bombs.

He admitted to traveling to the Waziristan region of Pakistan, where he was instructed at an al Qaeda camp on how to bomb subways.