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Reactions in South East Europe
to the attacks on 11 September
AIM Banja Luka, September 27, 2001
Bosnia & Terrorism
In the wake of the Sept. 11 tragedy in the U.S., in addition to
Macedonia and Kosovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina also found itself on a list
of countries that were and remain favorite destinations for terrorists.
This publicly announced fact provoked a variety of responses: Serbs were
delighted, and stressed that during the war they kept warning foreigners
that terrorists were fighting for the army of the Muslim-Croat
Federation, but that they kept turning a deaf ear to these claims and
chose to support the terrorists' "holy war" instead. On the other hand,
the Federation's government was deeply embarrassed and worried what
other facts could emerge now that the story of the participation of
mujahedeen in the war against the Serbs and the Croats has begun to
unravel.
Confirmation that Bosnia and Herzegovina is among the countries used by
terrorists came ten days after the attack on New York and Washington
from Federation Interior Minister Muhamed Besic. True, he denied media
reports that there are terrorist training camps in Bosnia, but he
admitted that a number of Bosnian nationals suspected of involvement in
terrorism will be extradited. Besic confirmed that three ethnic
Egyptians with Bosnian passports have been detained and will be handed
over to Egypt as soon as they are stripped of Bosnian citizenship. He
also said that this summer two naturalized Bosnian citizens were
extradited to France on suspicion of terrorism. One person was also
arrested on suspicion of involvement in planting explosives in Rijeka in
1995 and will soon be handed over to Croatia.
In a bid to demonstrate that the Federation is already dealing with
terrorism, Minister Besic admitted that the Bosnian entity was a safe
haven for terrorists and that some of them were granted Bosnian
passports. Now the government in Sarajevo will soon have to announce who
and for what purposes issued Bosnian travel documents to foreigners and
divulge the identities of these individuals. For the time being it is
known that Osama bin Laden's close associate Mehrez Adouni, was arrested
at Istanbul airport on Sept. 9, 1999. Adouni was a member of the Al
Mujaheed unit until May 1993. He applied for Bosnian citizenship on Dec.
18, 1997, and obtained a Bosnian passport in five days. There is
evidence linking Adouni to a conspiracy to assassinate Pope John Paul II
during his visit to Sarajevo, when explosives were discovered under a
bridge in the Sarajevo municipality of Novi Grad. In April 2001, one
Said Atmani was arrested in Zenica on a French arrest warrant. Atmani,
who also possessed a Bosnian passport is suspected by French police of
being involved in a series of terrorist attacks on department stores,
banks, and armored cars.
Bosnian Foreign Minister Amer Kapetanovic responded to claims that there
are 11,000 mujahedeen in Bosnia by saying that they are naturalized
Bosnian citizens. "No one denies that there were fighters from Islamic
countries in the Bosnian army, but this does not mean that they are all
terrorists," said Kapetanovic. The number of these troops that fought in
the Bosnian Army was never made public. The Zagreb Nacional newspaper
quoted a figure of 6,000. In addition, nobody knows the number of
naturalized Bosnian citizens from Islamic countries or from other
foreign countries.
Several media outlets reported that Bosnian passports were issued to men
from Islamic countries by the Bosnian embassy in Vienna. This was
recently confirmed by Republika Srpska Premier Mladen Ivanic. He
informed the public that the RS government had given international
organizations a copy of a letter sent by a Vienna embassy official to
Alija Izetbegovic, asking for instructions on what to do when people
from Islamic countries apply for citizenship, and a response from
Izetbegovic saying that they should issue passports to "everybody who
has helped our cause."
When it announced a comprehensive program for fighting terrorism, the
Council of Ministers also extended the mandate of a commission for
revising Bosnian citizenship, and ordered that analysis of all passports
issued from 1992 to the signing of the Dayton agreement be carried out.
It was not announced when this task will be accomplished. It is not even
certain that such records exist. It is even believed that the issuing of
passports was a discretionary right of certain high officials and that
no unified records were kept.
In addition to condemning terrorism, Bosnian officials hastened to
stress that Bosnia-Herzegovina is resolved to fight the problem. The
Council of Ministers came forth with an anti-terrorism plan. Numerous
initiatives have been announced for establishing regional and
international institutions, among which a regional center for asylum
seekers and migration, to operate as part of the Stability Pact in
Sarajevo, as well as a center for training special police to combat
organized crime under the auspices and support of the EU.
Bosnian officials are believed to be involved in international crime and
are linked to the illegal transfer of people via the Sarajevo and Tuzla
airports and trafficking of drugs, weapons and smuggling. Such channels
have existed in Bosnia and certain neighboring countries for years with
the blessing of both local and international officials. Much of it will
now surface, but to eliminate such a criminal network will not be easy.
This is why those who doubt that the current authorities in Bosnia and
Herzegovina will be capable of efficiently fighting terrorist
infiltration and activities could prove right. Politically unstable,
disorganized and poor, Bosnia and Herzegovina will continue to be a
crime zone and a potential source of danger to the region's stability
for some time to come.
Branko Peric (AIM Banja Luka)
First on: http://www.aimpress.org/dyn/trae/archive/data/200109/10930-008-trae-sar.htm
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