Posted by
Darko Trifunovic on Tuesday, July 28, 2009 3:53:04 PM
Posted July 27th, 2009 at 5:34 PM by Donna Martinez
From the FBI’s press release:
Seven individuals have been charged with conspiring to
provide material support to terrorists and conspiring to murder,
kidnap, maim, and injure persons abroad, David Kris, Assistant Attorney
General for the National Security Division; George E.B. Holding, U.S.
Attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina; and Owen D.
Harris, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI’s Charlotte Field Division,
announced today.
On Wednesday, July 22, 2009, a federal grand jury in the Eastern
District of North Carolina returned a sealed seven-count indictment
against the following defendants:
Daniel Patrick Boyd, 39, a U.S. citizen and resident of North Carolina
Hysen Sherifi, 24, a native of Kosovo and a U.S. legal permanent resident located in North Carolina
Anes Subasic, 33, a naturalized U.S. citizen and resident of North Carolina
Zakariya Boyd, 20, a U.S. citizen and resident of North Carolina
Dylan Boyd, 22, a U.S. citizen and resident of North Carolina
Mohammad Omar Aly Hassan, 22, a U.S. citizen and resident of North Carolina
Ziyad Yaghi, 21, a U.S. citizen and resident of North Carolina
- Bosnian Muslim politician says that the Islamic terrorist with
European features that are based in Bosnia are more dangerous for
the security of Europe then the 'White al-Qaeda' with bases in
Kosovo, reports Croatian daily Vecernji List.
-
- "In Bosnia and Herzegovina today al-Qaeda is in a strategic
planning phase. This means that, among such potentials - and it is
likely that there are 100,000 such believers - you can find five
people... to hang bombs on their belts and bring in explosives,"
says Dzevad Galijasevic, chairman of the New Democratic Party in
Bosnia and an author of the recently published book The Era of
Terrorism in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
-
- Mr. Galijasevic says that the international community does not
attach a high level of importance to the presence of 'White
al-Qaeda' because Bosnia is not the target of terrorist
activities.
It is clear," concludes Galijasevic that the al-Qaeda cells in
Bosnia "are waiting for EU accession; thus, this white, European
physiognomy and anthropology - the so-called 'white al-Qaeda' - can
in fact be the most fatal for Europe, while Bosnia-Herzegovina is an
insignificant target for al-Qaeda."
In August of 2007, US diplomat Raffi Gregorian said in an
interview for a Sarajevo daily that al-Qaeda uses Bosnia as a
transit point but labeled the local Bosnian Muslims not as "sleeper"
cells but as "helper" cells.
"There are sympathizers in the country who are ready to help
al-Qaeda with hiding agents, providing financial support or
providing false documents," said Gregorian, the principal deputy to
Miroslav Lajcak who is the top international administrator of
Bosnia.
The head of the Bosnian Muslim anti-terrorism Special Services
unit, SIPA, Aner Hadzimahumutovic, immediately reacted against
Gregorian's statement saying that the unit "has no information on
anyone with ties to the terrorist organization al-Qaeda living in
the country."
The top international administrator of Bosnia, Miroslav Lajcak,
recently issued an order that forces Bosnian Serb police units to be
merged with these Bosnian Muslim ones to which Serbs object.
In his recent book Al-Qaeda In Bosnia Herzegovina: Myth Or
Present Danger, senior editor for the South Slavic and Albanian
Languages Service with the Prague-based Radio Free Europe, Vlado
Azinovic, says that the al-Qaeda has "enjoyed protection and support
from the highest ranks of the Bosniak political and intelligence
establishment" but blames the existence of the Serb Republic as the
real threat to Europe.
"My book maintains that the presence of Wahhabism and of the
remaining mujahedin do not qualify Bosnia as a particular threat to
international security," Azinovic says and adds that "the
establishment of the Serb Republic" makes Bosnia a divided country
whose "borders are porous and susceptible to human and drug
trafficking, while weapons and ammunition are still readily
available."
"Bosniak intellectual elite are at quite a distance from the
battleground where this battle is fought - in mosques, rural
settlements, villages, and among the insufficiently educated
population," says Mr. Galijasevic whose book includes names and
activities of 1,250 of al-Qaeda members who have domiciled in
Bosnia, got married with locals and enjoy political protection.
"I identified their political protectors such as Haris Silajdzic,
Hasan Cengic, Alija Izetbegovic, and Bakir Izetbegovic, as well as
their protectors in the police such as Semsudin Mehmedovic, who is
currently the deputy chairman of the committee overseeing SIPA and
police reform expert," says Galijasevic.
Haris Silajdzic is currently the President of Bosnian Muslims.
In 2004, Abdurahman Khadr, the son of the killed Pakistani
al-Qaeda operative Ahmed Said Khadr, says that the CIA helped him
settle in Bosnia and asked him to spy on the the largest Mosques in
Sarajevo, the King Fahd mosque, ran by a local Bosnian Muslim Imam
Nezim Halilovic Muderis known for extremist preaching.
At the Sarajevo Mosque, Abdurahman became friendly with a Bosnian
Muslim recruiter for al-Qaeda operations in Iraq.