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Dr Darko Trifunovic - Unterstanding Jihad in Bosnia





Understanding Jihad

INTERVIEW:
With Comm. Abu Abdel Aziz 'Barbaros' (Bosnia)

TABLE OF CONTENTS


* Al-Sirat Al-Mustaqeem: Interview with Sheikh al-Mujahideen Abu Abdel Aziz
* Background
* Summary of Resources



SOURCE: Al-Sirat Al-Mustaqeem (The Straight Path)
ISSUE: No. 33, Safar 1415, August 1994
TITLE: Al-Sirat Al-Mustaqeem: Interview with Sheikh al-Mujahideen
Abu Abdel Aziz
INTERVIEWED BY: Tawfig Tabib
Contact al-Sirat al-Mustaqeem for the original arabic text.
URL: http://www.assirat.org/mag/
Email: info@assirat.org

NOTE:

Translation includes:

* Glossary
* Background information
* A summary of resources (1992-1996)
TRANSLATION: MSANEWS;
TRANSLATION COMPLETED: December 2, 1995 in anticipation of our return.
UPDATE: MAY 1996;




The last visit of Abu Abdel Aziz to the US was to attend the third
annual gathering of IANA (Islamic Assembly of North America), which
was held from 21-25 December 1995, in Dearborn, Michigan. Call
(800) 994-IANA (or +1-313-667-0006), fax to (800) 998-IANA (or
+1-313-667-0007), or email to: <Conf@IANAnet.org> for more
information on the convention. Presently, Abu Abdel Aziz is know to
be in detention in a Saudi Arabian prison. Other than this, we have
no further information on his exact whereabout or condition.

For updates on "Jihad action" consult the homepage of CARE
INTERNATIONAL, INC. or al-Hussam on-line (The Sword on-line)
(http://www.cybercom.net/~cib/alhussam.htm) or e-mail them at
<careboston@aol.com>.

TEXT: FOLLOWING its tradition of discussing (issues) with Ulema (scholars), students of (legal Islamic) knowledge and reformers, we present before the hands of the dear readers this interview. It is with one of the forerunners of Jihad in this era. Hiwar (dialogue) with Mujahideen is - with no doubt - one to which the soul longs, and for which one's mood relaxes. It is no doubt that Jihad has become in these days a grave accusation not only in the Arab and Western media, but also in the minds of many within the rank and file of the youth of Revivalist Islam. Their views and legal rulings are confused because of unclear experiments, and sometimes phony symbols.

Jihad remains (an authentic expression of Islam) for the people of (Islamic religious and legal) knowledge and the people of Jihad (Ahl al-Jihad); those who know the (legal) conditions of Jihad in the Qur'an, Sunnah and the understanding of the pious generations (as-Salaf as-Salih). Here is, my brother, the reader, the interview we conducted with Sheikh Abu Abdel Aziz.



THE BEGINNING

Q. To begin with, we would like to welcome the Mujahid Abu Abdel Aziz. We would like him to give us a brief overview of how he came to know Jihad. What are in your opinion the characteristics of the Mujahid in this time and era?

A. All grace be to Allah, as is due unto Him, and I bear witness that there is no one worthy of worship except Allah and that Muhammad is his slave and messenger. To begin with, I would like to thank the newsletter Al-Sirat al-Mustaqeem for its interest in Jihad and Mujahideen, and its interest to propagate (Islam) in this land, which is a land of Kufr (unbelief), and permissiveness. I would like to commend them for propagating (the right knowledge about Islam), especially reminding Muslims of their role in standing up to the propaganda of others (against them) in this land, so that the light of Islam and its purity become clear. May Allah reward you with the best.

Now, concerning the beginning of Jihad in my case, I was one of those who heard about Jihad in Afghanistan when it started. I used to hear about it, but was hesitant about (the purity and intention of) this Jihad. This -- and Allah knows best -- is most probably because we forgot the concept of Jihad in Islam. We became part of those who subscribe to the conception that Islam means Istislam (submission) and Salam (peace), and that Jihad was only prescribed at the dawn of Islam, and now it is history and that the present forum is one of call and propagation of the faith (Da`wah). This credo reached the point that the lights of Jihad, its rules and prescriptions (as detailed in the coded Islamic legal text), faded (and disappeared) from our daily reality in the Ummah (World Muslim Community). But Allah -- in His infinite wisdom and planning -- made it such that these brothers in Afghanistan declared Jihad (against the communist government and the Russian intruders) and revived this important element of Islam to teach people anew that Jihad means "to fight to make the word of Allah supreme and the word of the disbelievers low and despised." (Qur'an)

One of those who came to our land (presumably Saudi Arabia) was sheikh Dr. Abdallah Azzam -- may his soul rest in peace -- I heard him rallying the youth to come forth and (join him) to go to Afghanistan. This was in 1984 -- I think. I decided to go and check the matter for myself. This was, and all praise be to Allah, the beginning (of my journey with) Jihad. I am still following this same path. I have found that the best sacrifice we can offer for the sake of Allah, is our souls, then our possession. This is because Allah said in his holy book, "Behold, God has bought from the believers their lives and their possession, promising them paradise in return, (and so) they fight in God's cause, slay, and are slain: a promise which in truth He has willed upon Himself in (the words of) the Torah, the Gospel and the Qur'an. And who could be more faithful to his bond than God? Rejoice, then, in the bargain which you have made with Him: for this, this is is the triumph supreme!" (At-Tawbah 9:111)

Then the conquest of Kabul came, and we thanked Allah, praised be He. The joy of Jihad overwhelmed our hearts. The Prophet, peace be upon him, said, "The highest peak of Islam is Jihad." We were looking for Jihad (after Afghanistan). We found it in the Philippines, and in Kashmir. Only fifteen days lapsed (after the conquest of Kabul) and the crisis of Bosnia begun. This confirmed the saying of the Prophet (of Islam), peace and blessings be upon him, who said, "Indeed Jihad will continue till the day of Judgment." A new Jihad started in Bosnia, (we moved there), and we are with it, if Allah wills.

As to your question about the characteristics needed for someone to be a Mujahid, I say: Belief in Allah, praised be He (comes first). He should be in our sight, heart and mind. We have to make Jihad to make His word supreme, not for a nationalistic cause, a tribal cause, a group feeling or any other cause. This matter is of great importance in this era, especially since many groups fight and want to see to it that their fighting is Jihad and their dead ones are martyrs. We have to investigate this matter and see under what banner one fights.

THE MEDIA CAMPAIGN (AGAINST JIHAD)

Q. Within the context of the International media campaign against Jihad, how do you evaluate the Muslims' approach to Jihad, especially after the intended distortion of the Afghan experiment?

A. The main purpose of the International media campaign against Jihad is to paint it with the trait of terrorism and things of that sort. (This is done) to push people away from it. They know that Muslims, if they hold tight to Jihad, will achieve the intended thrust which will make them reach whatever Allah wills. They know quite well that the Muslim zeal to Jihad stems from the belief that Allah is the sole source of victory, He will send His help from the sky and that if the Mujahid dies, his abode shall be the highest Firdaws (Peak of Paradise), among the prophets (Nabiyyin), the truthful (Siddiqin) and martyrs (Shuhada'), and those near to Allah, as Allah, praised be He, said, "They are with their Lord receiving their bounty (Rizq)." The media campaign wants to convince people and prove to them that the Jihad in Afghanistan failed, that the Afghan experiment is utter shame. This thesis is widespread whether you consider Western sources or the secular (Arab ones). The truth of the matter is that there is a confusion of facts. What is happening (today) in Kabul is erroneous, however it does not tarnish the brightness of Jihad and its necessity (as an Islamic injunction).

THE WESTERN MEDIA AND ABU ABDEL AZIZ

Q. Many people - especially in the West - came to know Abu Abdel Aziz through the Western media first. What do you think about the present Islamic media and their presence in Jihad battle-zones?

A. It is a pity that the media is in the hands of the West. They are far ahead of (official and otherwise) Islamic media; manifolds indeed. They have institutes teaching this art and they compete to obtain information and news, especially when it comes to Jihad. Westerners wanted to present Jihad and those participating in it and I am one of those they featured personally. This is a new breed for them, especially in the West. It is (also) because Bosnia is in the heart of Europe and from it Jihad was declared. The Islamic presence is very poor (in this journalistic domain). Most Muslims are content with translations and report what the Westerners themselves investigate. The events and analyses are not presented from an Islamic angle. We hope Muslim reporters come to us and research the events themselves and not stay behind their desks and simply translate reports and news. (They must investigate claims themselves).

HOW DID JIHAD START IN BOSNIA?

Q. In short, how did (your) Jihad start in Bosnia, and what is the truth to the existence of an Arab Mujahideen Brigade under your command? What is its role and what are its relations with the Bosnian government?

A. As I told you before, when Jihad in Afghanistan was over, with the conquest of Kabul, I went with four of those who participated in Afghanistan to Bosnia to check out the landscape. We wanted to see things with a closer eye. I wanted to find out the truth to what is reported by the Western media. And surely, as was reported, there was persecution of Bosnian Muslims. Many were slaughtered, others were killed, while others were forced to exile. The chastity of their women was infringed upon for the simple reason that they were Muslims. The Christians took advantage of the fact that the Muslims were defenseless with no arms. They recalled their age-old hatred. As to Arab Mujahideen (in Bosnia), they do not have a separate battalion. There is a battalion for non-Bosnian fighters. Arabs are a minority compared to those of the Mujahideen (gathered from around the World). This battalion is under a unified command and is called Kateebat al-Mujahideen (Mujahideen Battalion), Odred "El-Mudzahidin" as they call them in Bosnian. Militarily, it has a link to the Bosnian government under the general command of the Bosnian Armed Forces. It is in fact part of the seventh battalion (SEDMI KORPUS, ARMIJA REPUBLIKE BH) of the Bosnian Army.

I am a field commander under the "General Unified Armed Command". We have - and all grace be to Allah - full jurisdiction in the region we are responsible for (Editor's note: Mostly central Bosnia). The general command of the Muslim forces wants to see results, it does not dictate strategy or action.

THE MEETING WITH ULEMA

Q. We heard, and many brothers heard, that you met with prominent Ulema and scholars in the Muslim World and discussed with them the question of Jihad in Bosnia. Can you tell us some of their views and the issues you discussed?

A. First, we consider our scholars the light and guidance of Islam. They are the heirs of prophets (as the Hadith says, "warathat al-Anbiya"). Our duty is to seek knowledge from them and guidance from their scholarly light (sic). I - alhamdulillah - met several prominent Ulema. Among them Sheikh Nasir ad-Din al-Albani, Sheikh Abdel Aziz Bin Baz and Sheikh Muhammad Bin Otheimin and others in the Gulf area. Alhamdulillah, all grace be to Allah, they all support the religious dictum that "the fighting in Bosnia is a fight to make the word of Allah supreme and protect the chastity of Muslims. It is because Allah said (in his holy book), "Yet, if they ask you for succor against religious persecution, it is your duty to give [them] this succor." (Lit. "to succor them in religion", Qur'an, al-Anfal, 8:72). It is then our (religious) duty to defend our Muslim brethren wherever they are, as long as they are persecuted because they are Muslims and not for any other reason.

(You asked about) the circumstances of my meeting with Sheikh Nasir ad-Din al-Albani - may Allah protect him. (I must note) that he is one of the great Ulema of this time and one seeks guidance in the light of his knowledge and view. (I say) in my last meeting with him, he was supportive of Jihad in Bosnia-Herzeg (as a religious duty). However, he told us not to attack - that is we, the Arab Mujahideen - since we were the smaller host (Editor's note: In reference to King Saul and his army. Check Surah Baqarah (2: 250). "[Yet] those who knew with certainty that they were destined to meet God, replied: How often has a small host overcome a great host by God's leave! For God is with those who are patient in adversity.") (The Sheikh) was afraid we might get killed in large numbers if we engaged people in the fight. However, he requested that we dig in and be at the most advanced defense-lines (Khat ad-Difa` al-Awwal) to defend those persecuted. This is a brief summary of his view - may Allah protect him. The rest of the Ulema support Jihad by any means (defensive or offensive). You must understand that - militarily speaking - the number of those killed in defense is (far) higher than those killed in attack. This is due to the fact that in attack, clashes and skirmishes take place between Mujahideen and Kuffar (non-believers). The Kafir (unbeliever) does not throw himself arbitrarily in the cross-fire for fear of killing his companions. This fact lowers the number of the dead and this is the most important fact of the matter.

BETWEEN AFGHANISTAN AND BOSNIA

Q. People speak these days about Jihad. What comes in their minds though, is the in-fighting between different Islamist groups in Afghanistan. Do you think - based on your on-the-field-expertise and knowledge of Bosnia and Afghanistan - that Bosnia will, one day, become just another Afghanistan?

A. First, each crisis has its own circumstances and many reasons (which are not clear) as to why things happen the way they do. (For instance), what comes in the minds of many Muslim brothers when questioning the reasons for the in-fighting between the Islamists groups in Afghanistan: Could such a thing happen in Bosnia in the future? God forbid. I say: First, what is happening in Afghanistan is due to the absence of religious conscious and restraint (Wazi` Deeni) as the primary factor (for such a dire condition). This is what (salafist) Sheikh Nasir ad-Din al-Albani (of Jordan) recounted: "We were hesitant and afraid to spread the correct Sunni practice (Da`wa) within our brethren. We were afraid to cause a fitna, dissension, and clash between the different schools of jurisprudence." (Editorial note: Most Afghans are Hanafis. Sheikh al-Albani refers to Ahl al-Hadith school, mostly Hanbalite-Salafist understanding). (He used to say), "We were afraid to give religious injunctions (fatawa) and used to say: 'Let us wait until the Afghan crisis is over. We will spread the correct practice then'. We let each leader work according to his understanding and Ijtihad. The end result is what you see today. Each leader wants to prove that he is on the right path and the rest are wrong-doers." We ask Allah to end the Afghan crisis and have our brethren come together under one Majlis (council) and one government and ask Him to guide them to abide by the rules of the book of Allah and the tradition of His Messenger, instead of slaughter and warfare.

Now as to Bosnia and whether it would one day become another Afghanistan? I say: There is a clear distinction between the two cases. In Bosnia, there aren't many political parties. There is no tribal rivalry (as there is in Afghanistan). In Bosnia, all fight under one state, under one rule, that of the Bosnian Army and its general command. The sole supreme commander of chief is Dr. Ali Izzet (Begovic). He is also the president of the state. There is no need for disputes as those of the type in Afghanistan. All grace be to Allah, alhamdulillah.

CAUSES FOR RIVALRY IN AFGHANISTAN

Q. Based on your connections and past participation in the Jihad in Afghanistan, what are the causes - in your view - for the rivalry that is going on there. How can Muslims elsewhere take lessons from the events on the Afghan battlefield.

A. (Of course), I have already answered this question. At least most of it. What we can learn from the Afghan experiment is that we should not allow parties to mushroom in one region. We should make people aware. We should educate people and remind them of Islam. We should show them how the Sahaba, the first disciples of the Prophet of Islam, may Allah be pleased with them, performed Jihad. Theirs was the true Jihad, the one that increases belief (Iman) and fear of the Almighty (Taqwa). This will not give chances for Satan to enter the hearts and create dissensions by highlighting the work of one party and dismissing the effort of another.

JIHAD IN KASHMIR

Q. We heard that you have strong connections in Kashmir. What is the latest from that battle front?

A. Jihad in Kashmir is still going on. It is healthy - alhamdulillah. Our Kashmiri brothers have achieved a lot. Some of our Mujahideen brethren, whether Arab or (Ajam non-Arab), such as the Pakistanis and our brethren from South-East Asia, have also helped. Their actions have been very successful, especially in the lands under Indian government control. Mujahideen execute hit-and-run operations. However there is a lack of support by Islamic governments and a lack of media coverage by Islamic outlets, on the level of atrocity and destruction by the non-believers in those lands: From killings to bulldozing to the burning of Muslims, sometimes alive, in public squares. Action is slow. There is also a lack of trained Jihadist cadres to stand to this dire situation. We ask Allah to give them and us success.

THE FUTURE OF JIHAD IN BOSNIA

Q. How do you perceive the future of Jihad in Bosnia, based on what has happened in the past and what is going on now? What are the best and worst case scenarios there?

A. Of course, knowledge of the future is with Allah. As to what we foresee based on our expertise and participation, in the past and now, I see that the future is for Jihad. Yes, Jihad in Bosnia should continue. This is because Westerners do not want Jihad to find a launching-board. We say to them what Allah said in His holy book, "If you champion Allah, Allah shall assuredly champion you and ground you feet." And He said, "It is our prerogative to champion the believers."

We have to strengthen our belief and the belief of our brethren the Bosnians by all means: through training, through education, through awareness programs and other means.

Now as to the best and worst case scenarios that things might turn out to: The best is the establishment of a state for the Muslims by any means and under any rule (religious or secular). When we went there, we did not go to train state employees and create cadres for it. We went to defend and champion our Muslim Brethren. The worst scenario is to have a mixed state or a mixed parliament or a mixed government between the Muslims and Christians as the case that happened in some Arab countries of having a Muslim president and a Christian vice-president or the opposite (Editor's note: the only such state in the Arab world is Lebanon).

WHAT ABOUT THE BOSNIAN PEOPLE?

Q. Based on your participation and long stay in Bosnia, how do you perceive the Bosnian Muslim people? What about their government? Do you think that the Christian onslaught has strengthened their attachment to their religion?

A. Concerning the Bosnian people, and this is not my view, but what our Muslim Brethren themselves say: They say that this is not a crisis (Azmah), but a blessing (Rahmah). 'If it were not for this, we would not have known Allah, glorious be He. We would not have known the road to the Mosque. Our men, women and children were loose morally and in their appearance, one could not distinguish the Muslim from the Christian. Muslim women were dressed, but were really exposed (Kasiyat-Ariyat). But now alhamdulillah, all grace be to Allah, our Mosques are full. Our women are wearing the complete Hijab' (Editor's note: commonly known as Niqab whereby women cover the body and face, as in Saudi Arabia and some Arab and Muslim countries). That is, they cover their faces completely. They are proud when they parade in the market-place or bazaar in it. The complete Hijab is something natural now. This, alhamdulillah, is due to Da`wa that our youth, the freelance Mujahideen, do in their spare time.

In general, commitment to religious doctrine and the return to Allah is fast in the midst of these Bosnians.

Now as to your question about the (Bosnian) government, I say: After my meeting with president Ali Izzet (Begovic) in the past, and according to what we hear and gather, the members of his government perform the five (obligatory) prayers. We, in general, do not expect them to be like the Sahaba, may Allah be pleased with them. These (Bosnian) people lived and knew nothing of the Deen (system and religion) and creed of Islam, except the name.

Qur'an and religious studies were absent during the communist days (of General Tito).

The Christian onslaught strengthened their attachment to their religious values. This is what they say: 'Our return to the Deen was caused by this onslaught.'

PEACE WITH THE CROATS

Q. What is the truth to reported peace with the Croats? How do you perceive the stands of America (US), Europe, Russia and the UN on the fighting in Bosnia?

A. We must seek the reasons and truth to this truce with the Croats. Once the Muslims made advances on the battlefield and got territory back from the Croats, they (Croats) latter betrayed the trust and joined with the Serbs to stab the Muslims in the back. Allah glorious be He, made it that the Muslims defeated the ambitions of the Croats. (Bosnian) Muslim Army forces backed by Kateebat al-Mujahideen were able to establish themselves in several Croat cities and villages. They were also able to siege other (localities) for extended periods. This lead Europe and America to rethink and assess this force which had established itself in Central Bosnia. This, of course, with the fact that all the roads were closed plus the imposition of sanctions. They realized that a truce between Croats and Muslims was necessary. They created a new formula and started to think of a "confederal" structure and union that will link Croats, Serbs and Muslims. They were successful in brokering a partial agreement between the Muslims and the Croats; this with the full backing of Europe, America, Russia and the UN. Muslims accepted the agreement with bitterness and compulsion. Lots of factors were involved: Harsh economic conditions with (for example) the price of 1 kg of sugar running at US$ 40 and a liter of Diesel at US$ 30! The agreement will be effective for one year. This will give time to the Muslims to weigh its positive and negative aspects.

Concerning (your inquiry) on the military options for American, European, Russian or UN forces (and their positioning on Bosnian soil). This runs counter to the Muslim interest. They aim to put a hindrance for Muslim advancement. These forces used the bombing of the Sarajevo central market, when a bomb fell in the heart of the Sarajevo Bazaar, as a means to curtail the Muslims. They declared Sarajevo a "safe heaven" and said that it would come under the control of the UN forces and ordered the Serbs to remove their heavy weapons from the center of Sarajevo to about 20 km off the city-limits. They demanded that Muslims deliver their heavy weaponry (to the UN). What happened is that the Serbs moved from Sarajevo to other cities and the same masquerade was played again. NATO and UN forces opened the roads for them to enter Gorazde, Bihac and other regions. When the Muslims tried to defend Gorazde (from falling), they were held back by UN forces. In general, what is happening is in accordance with what Allah said in his holy book, "Christians and Jews will not be satisfied with you until you follow their ways."

MATERIAL SUPPORT

Q. A lot of noise and rambling is made when one talks of material support. Whether it is officially given by different governments or that offered by different philanthropic Islamic institutions. People question whether such money reaches the Mujahideen or those who need it most. Can you shed some light on this issue? What is the best way, in your view, to send help to fighters there?

A. Yes, dear brother! Many Muslim states collected material help, aired what is happening in Bosnia, created relief agencies in all Arab and Muslim lands. But did these agencies deliver this money or send it to fighters? I can assure you that no Muslim or Arab state delivered money or food for Mujahideen. Where did this money go? What is delivered to the Bosnian government directly? Did these agencies open their own refugee camps and offer food services for the needy in different regions? This, I can neither confirm nor deny. As for Mujahideen, it is a pity that no Muslim state wants to help or even deal with them. They are fought by these states and are considered terrorists. This is what they say. (Official) heads of relief agencies say that they do not want to deal with Mujahideen because they are terrorists. "All power and glory are to Allah" (for such accusations)!

Does any help reach us? Yes, from individuals. Our good brothers collect donations for us and bring them directly to us. We use these donations to buy food and clothing. May Allah reward them the best, Jazakum Allah Khayran. The best way to send donations - in my view - is for Islamic centers to deliver them directly, in the person of their Iman or Mosque official. He collects these donations and sends them personally to the Mujahideen (as a religious duty). Donations trough relief agencies or governments do not necessarily make it to Mujahideen, even if they are collected in their name (as is done in some countries).

A FINAL WORD

Q. Do you have a final issue you would like to address?

A. May Allah reward you the best. And this is not a final word, but a request and announcement. (I would like to say) that the number of Mujahideen in Bosnia is small. A very small number of brethren came from Muslim countries and despite their Islamic commitment, they have little religious knowledge to do Da`wa in the midst of these brothers and sisters. We need - and this is unfortunate - Ulema, scholars of Islam, in Bosnia. Believe me dear brother, until now, two years since we established our base there, there isn't a single scholar in our midst for us to seek his religious judgment. For the small number of youth that make it here, we ask them do Da`wa, and they reply, "We came seeking martyrdom. We did not come to sit in Mosques and public squares to teach people and educate them. We want the word of Allah to be supreme and the word of the dis-believers to be low and despised. All we wish for is a bullet that hits our chests through which we reach Shahada (the state of witness and martyrdom)." The other issue I would like to address is the question of material support. Again, I say that collections made in the name of Mujahideen, through official means, I have no knowledge of. You should consult with such institutions and agencies as to where the money goes. (Again) many relief agencies do not like to deal with the Mujahideen. They are afraid of "helping and assisting terrorists" as the saying goes.

Finally, I ask Allah to make you and I successful (in this world and the hereafter). I ask Him to help the workers and those who support this newsletter to perform their religious duty of Da`wa, to publicize Mujahideen news and Jihad, not just in Bosnia, but also in Kashmir, Tajikistan, Philippines and Armenia. Again thank you for your interest. Our final prayer, alhamdulillah, all grace to Allah, Lord of the worlds.

END OF TRANSLATION


GLOSSARY


Abd: Slave
Abu: Father
Ahl: People (pl. Aal as in Aal Saud, 'House of Saud'. Should not
be confused with the article al- in Arabic which is the equivalent of
'the' in English, etc.)
Alhamdulillah: All praise is due to Allah
Alim: Scholar (pl. Ulema)
Allahu Akbar: God is great
Anfal: Loosely, it means war booty; accurately, it means bounty provided by
God for submiting to His will.
Ansar: Champions
Aziz: Mighty-One
Deen: Religion or system by which one lives; (Related words: Madinah, Dayan,
etc.)
Da`wa: Call, propagation, proselytism, depending on the usage
Firdaws: Paradise (Word crept into Arabic from Persian predating the dawn
of Islam)
Fatwa: Legal ruling (pl. fatawa)
Fitna: Discord; mischief in land.
Hadith: Sayings and practice of the prophet of Islam otherwise known as
'Sunnah'
Hijab: Veil
Hiwar: Dialogue
Istislam: Submission
Ijtihad: Legal reasoning done according to well established principles
(five principles around which Islamic law or Sharia revolves; accepted
by all schools of Islamic jurisprudence) and established norms (as
defined by the practice and traditions of the different schools.)
Jihad: (Legal) Fighting to make the word of Allah supreme; (Lit.) To
exert the utmost in ones cause;
Kafir: Disbeliever (Legal); The literal meaning disappeared with the
advent of Islam. Many will not even recognize it if used in a literal
context other than that defined by the religious law. Ibn Manzur
has about 10 pages in his dictionary (Lisan al-Arab) explaining all
the usages of this term. Relatred words: Kuffar, Kufr, Kafirun.
In her Islam and Democracy: Fear of the Modern World, Mernissi points
out for instance that, according to her own wording, 'the disturbing
fact that,' in the language of the Arabs, the words for disbelief (Kufr)
and intellect (Fikr) are anagrams. However, there is no linguistic
proof to justify the derivation of one from the other. There are no
connections between the two; this was her observation.
Kateeba: Battalion
Ma'sada: A lion's den (in the context of Ma'sadat al-Ansar)
Mujahid: One who performs Jihad (pl. Mujahideen)
Nabi: Prophet (pl. Anbiya, Nabiyyin)
Niqab: Type of Hijab that covers everything except the eyes, commonly
known as Chador (which is the Persian word for tent)
Rahmah: Blessing
Rizq: Bounty
Shahid: Martyr (Leg.), Witness (Lit.)
Salaf: Predecessor (vs. Khalaf: Offspring); Salafism is a movement based
on a "puritan" reading of the pious generation's understanding of
Islam. The Salaf generations are well-defined in (Islamic) religious
law.
Salam: Peace
Sahaba: Early generation of Muslims
Siddiq: Truthful
Ummah: World Muslim Community
Urdu: Word of Turkish origin which originally meant "Army". It was the
language of the standing army is Mogul India; a mixture of Arabic,
Persian, Turkish (Mogul) with a Hindi base.



BACKGROUND INFORMATION


The first report to emerge on "Arab-Afghan" Mujahideen presence in Bosnia,
was an interview accorded to Time Magazine by Comm. Abu Abdel Aziz
(Barbaros) in 1992. It included a picture of the commander in his
henna-dyed beard and Afghan style fatigue. After Time, al-Sharq al-Awsat,
the Saudi-owned, London-based daily run a front-page story on Abu Abdel
Aziz and his activities in Bosnia. (A summary of the main points in
al-Sharq al-Awsat's feature were reported by Reuters.) The al-Sharq
al-Awsat story included an interview with the man and a short profile. It
did not indicate his real name or country of origin. An extended
translation of an interview accorded to a Pakistani Islamic journal was
reproduced on the MSANEWS list about three years ago. The interview cited
among other facts that Abu Abdel Aziz spoke perfect Urdu (Pakistan's
official language). According to the interview Abu Abdel Aziz spent
extended periods in Kashmir.

Abu Abdel Aziz's forces were, to the contrary of other Islamic freelancers,
part of the seventh battalion of the Bosnian Army (SEDMI KORPUS, ARMIJA
REPUBLIKE BH), The American Islamic Group (AIG) reproduced communiques of
fighters on the ground. Defense & Foreign Affairs' Strategic Policy and
Compass Newswire for their part argue that Islamist fighters were part of
the 3rd corps. As many as 2,000 foreign Muslims fought along Bosnia's
Muslims. For example, the "3 Korpus Odred el-Mudzahidin" battalion was
300 men strong (Compass, 25 Jan.)

Since 20,000 U.S. troops moved to serve as UN keepers in Bosnian fears
have risen to possible "terrorist" attacks by various Islamist and other
"rogue elements".

Trained in the use of automatic weapons, rocket-propelled grenades, and
mortars, Islamic volunteers "played a key role in the campaign against
Christian Serbs." (Compass, 25 Jan.) They played a "major role" in the 1994
capture of the city of Santici. Tension between "Mujahideen" and UN peace
keeping forces have risen since November when a volunteer fighter was
killed by a British soldier. US officials believe that the killing on
November 19 of an American UN worker in Tuzla was a retaliation.

Croat soldiers killed five freelancers in December when they tried to crash
through a roadblock.

About 8,000 soldiers, including units from the third corps, lined up in a
local soccer field in Zenica (after the signing of the Dayton
peace agreement) to welcome President Alija Izetbegovic. The troops
chanted Islamic slogans as President Izetbegovic congratulated the third
corps for its "valor and bravery," reported Doug Roberts, VOA's
correspondent in Zenica, December 10.

The Bosnian government enticed many volunteers to marry Bosnian women and
avoid deportation. The US for its part is pressing Turkey, Saudi Arabia its
main "Muslim allies", to use their influence with the Bosnian government to
get rid of the Islamist fighters (according to Compass Newswire sources.)

Two-hundred and fifty Mujahideen refused in mid-January to cross to Croatia
for fear of reprisal. They were halted in Bihac as news that Croatian
special police "in full-combat gear", were lying in wait for their arrival
in 25 jeeps surfaced (Compass). Twenty left January 17 with their faces
covered in order to avoid identification, on a flight from Zagreb to
Istanbul. The rest were gathered in the Koprivna military cadet school
north of Bihac, awaiting the end of their ordeal.

Intelligence Newsletter indicated in its 21 March 1996 issue that "300
Arab-Afghan" Mujahideen were flown from Sarajevo to Istanbul in groups of 5
or 10 over the last few months (Intel Newsletter info is based on Arab and
Western Intelligence sources.) Many were welcomed by the Islamist Refah
Party, and accommodated in various religious schools. The 300 unit was
split into two groups. One was sent to Northern Cyprus for special Guerilla
Warfare training (about 100). The other two hundred were flown to
Jalalabad, Hikmatyar's stronghold, for an eventual transfer to Chechnya.
According to the same byline, Turkey's MIT Intelligence Service played a
"highly ambiguous role" in the transfer. The best of the Mujahideen were
"creamed off" by MIT for sophisticated training (espionage, recruitment of
agents, code). The same byline adds that they were "recruited to join the
(Turkish) Naval Intelligence Service." According to Egyptian "intelligence"
50 left Tuzla on February 28 aboard a domestic Turkish airline bound for
Albania. Algerians, Syrians and Saudis formed the core of this group.

"Arab-Afghans" have established their own network and charity
organizations, including a certain "Islam sans Frontiere". Last year,
Taalat Fouad Kassem of the Gamaa Islamiyya, Egypt "disappeared" while on a
routine mission to Bosnia for inspection. It is believed that the Croat
government abducted him, in coordination with Egyptian intelligence (This
is what AIG reported). Other visitors to the region include Kamareddine
Kherbane, a FIS official, and an ex-Algerian air force pilot. On a fresher
note, one of the five man killed in clashes with police in France and
Belgium on March 29, French convert to Islam Christophe Caze, had traveled
to Bosnia on a "humanitarian mission." (Compass, 1 April)

Egyptian Islamist columnist Fahmi Houidi called last year on Arab
governments to repatriate the "road-warriors" of Islam on the premise that
their threat was not directed against them but stemed from a pure religious
fervor. In any case, many have been infiltrated by various Arab
Intelligence. According to faithful sources, the most serious case was
discovered when the late Sheikh Abdallah Azzam received a letter from a
"repentant" Jordanian Intelligence operative on a trip to Northern
Afghanistan in the late 80's. The whole staff in charge "Bayt al-Ansar"
passport department in Peshawar was fired, "based on the recommendations of
the repentant's letter". Most worked for the bosses "back home" and used to
provide them with detailed information on who's who in the Sheikh's circle.

Yossef Bodansky (The Mubarak Assassination Attempt, Defense & Foreign
Affairs' Strategic Policy July-August 1995) advanced a theory for the
existence of a global "Islamist Internationale" hatched at last year's PAIC
(Popular Arab Islamic Conference) gathering in Sudan , with the formation
an internationalist "Armed Islamist Movement" (AIM) putting the fate of
these freelancers in retrospect, as a sideline to the open forum. The
theory, very entertaining as it might be, lacks hard evidence. Do not miss
to read it.




SUMMARY OF RESOURCES (BY DATE)



SOURCE: COMPASS Newswire April 1, 1996
ARTICLE: ISLAMIST INVOLVEMENT MORE PLAUSIBLE IN NORTHERN
FRANCE EVENTS
URL: http://www.fednews.com/compass.html
Email: <info@fednews.com>
Toll Free: (800) 969-3677

SOURCE: Intelligence Newsletter 21 March, 1996
URL: http://www.indigo-net.com/
SECTION: THREAT ASSESSMENT; FUNDAMENTALISM; No. 284
ARTICLE: From Bosnia to Chechnya

SOURCE: Intelligence Newsletter 22 February, 1996
URL: http://www.indigo-net.com/
SECTION: WHO'S WHO; No. 284
ARTICLE: Issa Abdullah Ali (Bosnia)

SOURCE: Intelligence Newsletter 8 February, 1996
URL: http://www.indigo-net.com/
SECTION: THREAT ASSESSMENT; TERRORISM; No. 281

ARTICLE: Tracing al-Sarai's Background [Al-Sarai was head of the
Mujahideen's main base in Pakistan, "Ma'sadat al-Ansar"]
SOURCE: Intelligence Newsletter 8 February, 1996

URL: http://www.indigo-net.com/
SECTION: SPOTLIGHT; No. 281
ARTICLE: Bosnia: When the Boomerang Returns

SOURCE: COMPASS Newswire January 25, 1996
ARTICLE: U.S. FEARS ISLAMIST ATTACK IN BOSNIA
URL: http://www.fednews.com/compass.html
Email: <info@fednews.com>
Toll Free: (800) 969-3677

SOURCE: SOURCE: al-Hussam (The Sword) On-Line
ARTICLE: al-Hussam News for Friday November 24th 1995.
URL: http://www.cybercom.net/~cib/alhussam.htm
Email: <careboston@aol.com>

SOURCE: Intelligence Newsletter November 23, 1995
URL: http://www.indigo-net.com/
SECTION: COMMUNITY WATCH; SAUDI ARABIA; No. 276
ARTICLE: Turki (al-Faisal) Appeals for Egypt's Help

SOURCE: Intelligence Newsletter November 23, 1995
URL: http://www.indigo-net.com/
SECTION: THREAT ASSESSMENT; TERRORISM; No. 276
ARTICLE: Egyptian Islamists Hit Back (Details on the killing of Alaa
el Din Nazmi in Geneva on Nov. 13 and the embassy blast in Islamabad, Nov.
19)

SOURCE: Intelligence Newsletter October 26, 1995
URL: http://www.indigo-net.com/
SECTION: THREAT ASSESSMENT; TERRORISM; No. 274
ARTICLE: Political Backdrop to Paris Attacks

SOURCE: Defense & Foreign Affairs' Strategic Policy July-August 1995
SECTION: SPECIAL STUDIES; The Middle East; Pg. 12
ARTICLE: The Mubarak Assassination Attempt Takes the Islamists' War to
Centre Stage
AUTHOR: Yossef Bodansky, Contributing Editor

SOURCE: Moneyclips, September 1, 1995
ARTICLE: QUESTIONS OF FAITH: Going for Jihad to Bosnia
SOURCE: SAUDI GAZETTE


SOURCE: Defense & Foreign Affairs' Strategic Policy May-June 1995
SECTION: SPECIAL STUDIES; Pg. 1
HEADLINE: The Massive Build-Up In Bosnia


SOURCE: Islam Report 30 May, 1995
ARTICLE: Bosnia Mujahideen Battalion: Mujahideen Battalion Communique No.1
and No.2, BATTLE OF THE MANIFEST VICTORY, The Lion-Bravery of BOSNIA)
AUTHOR: The American Islamic Group (AIG)
Email: <islam@Powergrid.electriciti.com>

SOURCE: Islam Report 20 March, 1995
ARTICLE: Bosnia Mujahideen, "The Ansar", Prepare Trenches!
AUTHOR: The American Islamic Group (AIG)
Email: <islam@Powergrid.electriciti.com>

SOURCE: THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS December 5, 1994, Monday, HOME FINAL
EDITION
SECTION: NEWS; Pg. 10A
ARTICLE: Islamic radicals using aid to impose ideas on recipients, Bosnians
say
AUTHOR: Alexandra Stiglmayer, Special Contributor to The Dallas Morning
News

SOURCE: COMPASS Newswire OCTOBER 28, 1994
SECTION: IN THE NEWS
ARTICLE: ARAB VETERANS OF AFGHANISTAN WAR LEAD NEW
ISLAMIC HOLY WAR
URL: http://www.fednews.com/compass.html
Email: <info@fednews.com>
Toll Free: (800) 969-3677
Article is archived at the "Reference Center For Terrorism In India" site
URL: http://rbhatnagar.csm.uc.edu:8080/india_terrorism/afghan_war_vetrans

SOURCE: The Times October 22, 1994
SECTION: Overseas news
ARTICLE: Islamic radicals offer pensions in return for jihad
AUTHOR: Anthony Loyd in Zenica

SOURCE: The Times October 21, 1994
SECTION: Overseas news
ARTICLE: Disciples of holy war answer call to fight and die
AUTHOR: Anthony Loyd in Zenica

SOURCE: The Reuter Library Report June 21, 1993
ARTICLE: AFGHANS TRAIN ARAB MILITANTS FOR WORLD "JIHAD"
AUTHOR: Suzy Price
DATELINE: KABUL, June 21

SOURCE: The Herald (Glasgow) April 17, 1993
SECTION: Pg. 11
ARTICLE: Storm-troopers of Islam
AUTHOR: Christopher Dobson

SOURCE: The Christian Science Monitor January 28, 1993
SECTION: THE WORLD; Pg. 6
ARTICLE: Bosnian Muslims Turn to Kuwait For Money, Arms
AUTHOR: Carol Berger, Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
HIGHLIGHT: A network of Arab contacts from Afghan war works to find support
for Muslim brethren

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times December 14, 1992, Home Edition
SECTION: Part A; Page 1; Column 3; Foreign Desk
ARTICLE: ISLAMIC VOLUNTEERS RALLYING TO KILLING FIELDS OF BOSNIA
AUTHOR: KIM MURPHY, TIMES STAFF WRITER

SOURCE: The New York Times November 14, 1992, Late Edition
SECTION: Section 1; Page 5; Column 1; Foreign Desk
ARTICLE: Muslims From Abroad Join in War Against Serbs
By CHUCK SUDETIC, Special to The New York Times
DATELINE: HAN BILA, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Nov. 10

SOURCE: Summary of World Broadcasts October 19, 1992
ARTICLE: Tanjug reports Zagreb weekly's interview with "Mujahidin"
leader in Bosnia (Interview with Abu Abdel Aziz in the Zagreb Weekly
GLOBUS)

SOURCE: The Reuter Library Report September 23, 1992
ADVANCED-DATE: September 22, 1992
ARTICLE: Mujahideen commander preaches holy war in Bosnia
AUTHOR: Kurt Schork

SOURCE: The Daily Telegraph January 25, 1993
SECTION: INTERNATIONAL; Pg. 8
ARTICLE: Muslims turn to Kuwaitis for arms cash SANCTION BUSTING
AUTHOR: Carol Berger in Kuwait City

SOURCE: Reuters September 23, 1992
ARTICLE: Mujahideen commander preaches holy war in Bosnia
AUTHOR: Kurt Schork
DATELINE: MEHURICI, Bosnia

SOURCE: The Reuter Library Report September 10, 1992
ARTICLE: Mujahideen teach Bosnian Moslems Jihad
DATELINE: CAIRO, Sept 10

SOURCE: Sunday Times August 30, 1992
SECTION: Overseas news
ARTICLE: Arabs join in Bosnia battle
AUTHOR: Andrew Hogg, Zenica




OTHER OPEN SOURCE REFERENCES


SOURCE: Global Hindu Electronic Network: Bharat (India): Reference Center
For Terrorism In India Try either one of the following URL's:
http://rbhatnagar.csm.uc.edu:8080/india_terrorism.html
http://129.137.65.180:8080/india_terrorism/

* * * * * * * * * *

Document includes the following eight papers:

* TASK FORCE ON TERRORISM & UNCONVENTIONAL WARFARE
(THE NEW ISLAMIST INTERNATIONAL)
House Republican Research Committee

* PAN-ISLAMIC FUNDAMENTALISM: EXPORTING TERROR
Excerpts from India Today

* Press Reports About Terrorism in India

* Press Reports About Afghan War Veterans in India

* PAKISTAN-BASED GROUPS TRAINS HOLY WARRIORS:
By HON. SHERROD BROWN

* PAKISTAN'S LINKS WITH FUNDAMENTALISM AND
INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM:
By HON PETER DEUTSCH

* H.Con.Res. 35: Bill Pakistan should be designated as a state sponsor of
Terrorism

* (YOSSEF) BODANSKY ON TERRORISM: Understated Brilliance
By Bernard J. Shapiro

* * * * * * * * * *

The FREEMAN CENTER FOR STRATEGIC STUDIES on the Jerusalem 1 Gopher contains
the following papers of Yossef Bodansky
URL: gopher://gopher.jer1.co.il/11/Politics/research/free

* Tehran, Baghdad & Damascus: The New Axis Pact - Part One
* Tehran, Baghdad & Damascus: The New Axis Pact - Part Two
* Iran, Syria and the Trail of the Counterfeit Money
* Terrorism and Islam - Understated Brilliance
* The Diminishing Hope for Peace
* Jerusalem in Context
* Between Washington, Jerusalem and Gaza - Part One
* Between Washington, Jerusalem and Gaza - Part Two
* Nov. 21, 1995: Peres and the New Middle East

* * * * * * * * * *











______________________________________________________________________________

MSANEWS Home Page: <http://msanews.mynet.net/>
Comments to the Editors: <msanews-ed@msanews.mynet.net>
Submissions for MSANEWS: <msanews@msanews.mynet.net>
Problems with subscription: <msaosu@postbox.acs.ohio-state.edu>
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Dr Darko Trifunovic - JIHAD IN BOSNIA

Jihad in Bosnia

Posing with the severed Serbian head
Bosnian Muslim posing with the head of decapitated Serb.

Bosnian Mujahedins: “Yes, We Are Terrorists!”

According to the RTS and Tanjug news agency, a Bosnian TV station has broadcast part of a new tape showing the activities of a mujahedin unit during the Bosnian war. The tape shows some of the crimes committed by the unit against Bosnian Serbs during the 1992-1995 war in central Bosnia.

The footage shows mujahedin sharpening axes which they later used to behead a Serb soldier, and a speech is also recorded of a jihadist saying, “They call us terrorists. We are terrorists and we will destroy all the enemies of Allah.”

In addition to the hair-raising scenes of corpses and mutilation, there are also pictures of living prisoners of war that the mujahedin had tied up and tortured, Tanjug described the scenes broadcast on Bijeljina’s BN TV.

There is also footage of the Bosnia mujahedins playing football using, instead of a ball, a decapitated head.

Bosnian Muslim President Alija Izetbegovic, an Al Qaida Mercenaries Recruiting Agent

The El Mujahed was a military unit consisting of Bosnian Muslims and fighters from Islamic countries who, as they say on the tape, came to Bosnia to “fight for Allah,” with the approval of the then Bosnian Muslim war council headed by Alija Izetbegovic, under whose command they fell, as part of the Muslim army in Bosnia.

This unit was formed in 1993, even though the groups of Afghan, Palestinian, Egyptian, Libyan etc. jihad mercenaries started pouring into Bosnia only a month after the war broke out, in 1992. According to the mujahedin testimony reviewed during the Hague trial to Bosnian Muslim general Rasim Delic, “This was done under the leadership of Sheikh Abu Abdul Aziz from Saudi Arabia,” joined by other veterans of Afghanistan’s jihad.

According to the clips shown yesterday on Bosnian TV, the same year El Mujahed unit was formed, an order was read out saying that they formed part of the Bosnian Muslim Army, and had the approval of the then Muslim leadership.

The footage also shows the arrival of then Bosnia President Alija Izetbegovic at the mujahedin camp.

The tape shows the camp from the inside, their training, life, religious practices and preparation for war in the “name of Allah”.

Mujahedin war cries can be heard, while there is also footage of the reading of an order from August 13, 1993, that they are recognized “by the Bosnian state and are part of the the armed forces of the Muslim state of Bosnia-Herzegovina,” and that they are there “in the name of Allah.”

“I Have Never Denied El Mujahed is Bosnian Army Unit” (Until I Was Indicted for War Crimes)

This tape was found by the Council of Concentration Camp Victims of the Republic of Srpska (Serbian republic in today’s Bosnia), whose president, Branislav Dukic, says that it came from the Bosnian Muslim side.

Dukic said that even among the Bosnian Muslims, there are “those who wish to prove the presence of mujahedin in Bosnia and the war crimes they committed on the territory of central Bosnia.”

Bosnian Muslim trophy box
Bosnian Muslims showing their trophy box: severed Serbian heads identified as remains of Blagoje Blagojevic, Nenad Petkovic and Brana Djuric. Central Bosnia, 1993.

Women were among those seen living in the mujahedin camp, dressed strictly according to Islamic dictates, as well as children, dressed in military gear, while one little girl is shown holding a “Scorpion” pistol.

Parts of the video material - titled “Jihad in Bosnia” - that was broadcast by BN TV will, according to the RTS report, be shown on the Republic of Srpska Radio-Television’s news program this evening.

Recently, another tape cropped up on the internet of a farewell ceremony for the mujahedin, featuring addresses given by the Chief of Bosnian Muslim Army Headquarters and Hague accused General Rasim Delic, and Commander of the Army Third Corps Sakib Mahmuljin.

The Hague prosecution will this week call new evidence at the trial of the former commander of the Bosnian Muslim Army Rasim Delic, who is charged on the basis of command responsibility for the crimes the mujahedin committed in central Bosnia. The prosecution will seek to admit into evidence a recording of Delic’s speech at the farewell ceremony, where he said:

“I have never concealed that this unit [El Mujahed] exists, that this is a unit of the Bosnian army, that it is incorporated in the Bosnian army control and command chain.”

Allah’s Shades of Green

According to the evidence of the Hague prosecution, Rasim Delic has also signed documents promoting and decorating mujahedin commanders and citations for special merit for the El Mujahed unit. The Bosnian Muslim Defense Ministry paid out 16,000 German Marks to each of El Mujahed unit members, as “compensation for their contribution to the war effort.”

Curious, since they claim they fight for Allah who, apparently, materializes in many shades of green.

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dr Darko Trifunovic - Bosnian White Al Qaeda-FBI: Seven Charged with Terrorism Violations in N.C.

FBI: Seven Charged with Terrorism Violations in N.C.

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.

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Dr Darko Trifunovic - BOSNIA: TERRORISM’S LOGISTICAL BASE

BOSNIA: TERRORISM’S LOGISTICAL BASE
Defense & Foreign Affairs Strategic Policy, October  2004 [Terrorism – Staff report]

Saudis and Iranians Work Together Through a Bosnian Terrorist Group to Support the Conflict in Chechnya

INFORMATION OBTAINED BY Defense & Foreign Affairs from a secret Wahabbi terrorist organization based in Bosnia shows how the Saudi and Iranian governments are working together to support combat operations against the Russian Government in Chechnya, and are building a base of future operations in Turkish-occupied Northern Cyprus. Moreover, during 2004 the organization they support has expanded dramatically in terms of operations and funding, and has opened a string of new offices and facilities around Bosnia and into Southern Serbia’s Raška (Sandzhak) Muslim area.

The organization, Kvadrat (Quadrant), a nominally Sunni Wahabbi order, whose members practice “Islam from the roots,” was founded in Sarajevo in 1995 and uses as its cadres children orphaned during the Bosnia-Herzegovina civil war, indoctrinating and training them in the Wahabbist ideology and in terrorist and guerilla warfare tactics.

Kvadrat sends its trained personnel through the “green transversal”- the Islamist and narco-trafficking safe-haven line - from Bosnia and, through Turkey and Georgia, to Chechnya, where they join al-Qaida-supported Chechen Islamist terrorist and guerilla operations against the Russian Government and the local population.

Significantly, the Iranian Government has denied that it supports the Chechen Islamist separatists, a public stance which has enabled Iran to trade with Russia, and, particularly, to acquire Russian advanced military systems. Faced with virtual isolation from sources of supply of main weapons systems - it can still obtain some missile and rocket systems from the People’s Republic of China (PRC) and North Korea (DPRK) - and essential political isolation, the clerical Iranian leadership publicly abandoned the Chechen cause, which they had ignited following the end of the Cold War, and proclaimed support for the Russian Government position on Chechnya.

In fact, support for the Chechen Islamists has continued to flow unabated from Afghanistan, through Iran and (with bribery) Azerbaijan, into Chechnya.

However, the now-clear involvement of Iranian VEVAK (Ministry of Intelligence and Security [MOIS] Vezarat-e Ettela’at va Amniat-e Keshvar) intelligence officers in training the youth of Kvadrat, supported by Saudi Government funding and officials, shows how both the Iranian clerics and Saudi Arabia have been working together on the common Islamist mission, despite Iranian claims of friendship with Russia, and despite Saudi Government claims that it is combating Islamist terrorism and, in particular, al-Qaida. Bosnian sources told Defense & Foreign Affairs that Kvadrat was, to all intents, an al-Qaida-linked organization, given that its members use the al-Qaida “pipeline” and fight with al-Qaida forces in Chechnya.

Sources close to Kvadrat indicate that the group’s members frequently engage in verbal fights with other Muslim religious leaders and are highly critical of other Islamic leaders for not going down the right path. One source noted: “The young Kvadrat members have been brainwashed for a decade; since they were little children in most cases. They have been taught to believe that only their zealous approach to Islam is correct; they are fanatical.”

Kvadrat now operates mainly in the triangle area between Zenica, Tuzla and Sarajevo, in Bosnia-Herzegovina. Pezo Adnan is believed still to be the operational leader of the group, although he “takes his orders” from a leader in Vienna, Austria. Adnan lives in Zenica. and his bodyguard and driver is a known mujahedin, referred to by his nom de guerre, “A?it,” who came to Bosnia through Zagreb in 1993. “A?it” was a member of the el-Mujahid terrorist unit in Bosnia from October 20, 1993. El-Mujahid, during Operation Hurricane 95 in 1995, operated as part of the structure of the Bosnian Muslim Army and, as a unit, participated in major war crimes - including beheadings and mass murders of prisoners - against Serb civilians and military personnel in Ozren and Vozuca.[Rasim Deli?, wartime commander of the Republic of Bosnia Herzegovina (RBiH) Army, essentially the Bosnian Muslim force, ordered the formation of the el-Mujahid unit, made up of foreign citizens, on August 13, 1993, in the area of responsibility of the RBiH Army Third Corps. The order was based on a decision by the RBiH Presidency, led by Alija Izetbegovi?, which confirms that the BiH leadership was behind the formation of el-Mujahid. “A?it” was one of the foreign recruits who came into the organization at the beginning; his national origin is not known at this time.]

“A?it” has been known, from surveillance, to be in permanent contact with Abu el-Mali, one of the el-Mujahid leaders, often referred to as the “emir,” a title usually given only to core Islamist leaders, such as Hasan Cengic.

Kvadrat has since 2001 been training orphan boys on Jablanickom Lake in the small village of Podi, in Bosnia. The main trainer for indoctrination is ?engi? Faruku from Sarajevo, but VEVAK officers conduct the training in terrorism and guerilla warfare. Indeed, one of the main activities of the organization in 2004, together with Iranian VEVAK instructors, has been to provide military support and Islamic fighters from Bosnia for operations in Chechnya. Žulum Almir, a Kvadrat member, was killed in Chechnya. Some members of Kvadrat were arrested in Turkey, en route to Chechnya; one such example was Bijedi? Kenan, who was arrested in Turkey in 2001.

Kvadrat gets funding from the seemingly-innocent High Saudi Committee for Children Without Parental Care (VSK) based in the King Fahd Cultural Center, in Sarajevo, Bosnia, and led by Sheikh Nasser al-Saeed (whose deputy is Abdul-Rahman al-Rashed, supported by Khalid al-Aqueli, who also has a Bosnian passport). VSK’s offices in Bosnia have, in the past, been raided by NATO Stabilization Force (SFOR) personnel over issues related to the support of terrorism. VSK cars are often identified at Kvadrat establishments, particularly at the facility at Jablanickom Lake (but also near other Kvadrat training facilities), and VSK officials and offices have repeatedly hosted known radical Islamists. VSK employee Saber Lahmer was, in fact, arrested by Bosnian Federal authorities for connections to terrorism.

Kvadrat also receives support from Al-Haramain charities - the Al-Haramain & Al-Masjed A1-Aqsa Charity Foundation - a Riyadh, Saudi Arabia-based organization which was declared on September 9, 2004, by the US Treasury Department to be a terrorist-related organization. (1) Significantly, Al-Haramain was specifically linked by the US Government to the support of terrorist operations in Chechnya, as well as al-Qaida operations against the two US embassies bombed in Nairobi and Dar es-Salaam in 1998.

Kvadrat officials have also been in close touch with Sheikh Imad, who was arrested by local authorities in Bosnia for links to al-Qaida.

Significantly, however, the main control or direction of Kvadrat comes from Vienna, Austria: businessman Mohammed Por?a, a Bosnian Muslim, appears to be providing strategic guidance and orders to Kvadrat. Por?a apparently also has links with other Islamist organizations in Austria and Germany, and is also involved in fundraising for Kvadrat. Clearly, following its formation in 1995, Kvadrat has had a number of financing sources, including fundraising in the international Muslim community. This has been conducted in part through Al-Haramain, but also through other channels open to Mr Por?a.Kvadrat in 2004 has been opening offices around Bosnia and in the southern Serbian region of Raška, which is adjacent to Bosnia’s Gorazde Corridor, which links the Muslim area of Bosnia with Serbia. Kvadrat’s involvement in extending its offices down into the Raška area indicates that it may now be officially linked into funding from narco-trafficking, the logistical lines for which, in Europe, include movement of narcotics from the East (ie: Afghanistan through Iran, Azerbaijan into Russia, or through Iran and Turkey) eventually into Albania and then through Kosovo and Raška areas of Serbia, into Bosnia and thence into Western Europe.

The main activist radicals in Kvadrat were identified by Defense & Foreign Affairs sources as: Softi? Samir, Suša Samir, Kolši? Nisvet, and Dzafi? Emir (born 1975; considered President of Kvadrat in Visoko city).

Defense & Foreign Affairs sources said that some Kvadrat fighters have been moving to Turkish-occupied Northern Cyprus after Chechen actions. Essentially, the sources report, Kvadrat has used Northern Cyprus as a safe-haven for some of its more active fighters, allowing them a discreet place to blend back into civil society before returning to Bosnia. However, it was understood that Kvadrat was also building a base in Northern Cyprus, to proselytize the Muslim community there with a view to longer-term domination of Cypriot society.

The Steering Committee of Kvadrat, has, since 1999, included:
Mezit Nermin (“Nerko”), from Sarajevo;
Seknic Sendad, from Mostar;
Sinanovic… Kermal, from Sarajevo;
Tahic… Berin, from Sarajevo;
Alic Galib, from Sarajevo;
Motoruga Elvir from Sarajevo;
Hodzic… Emir, from Sarajevo;
Cukic… Sabahudin, from Sarajevo;
Cengic… Faruk, from Sarajevo;
Hasanovic… Aliya, from Sarajevo;
Ahmetovic… Amir, from Kaknja;
Nuhanovid… Sanel, from Biha…
Ortas Emire, from the Pale suburb of Sarajevo.

But in 2004 it was noted that membership of Kvadrat was dramatically enlarged, and the Steering Committee was also enlarged by additional members:
[surnames first]
Cardakovic Seco, Dedovic Edin, Gusic Elmedin (“Medo”), Skrijelj Admir.

What is significant is that the Office of the High Representative (OHR), the internationally-appointed governor of Bosnia-Herzegovina, has continued to maintain that terrorist organizations, or terrorist support organizations, did not exist in Bosnia. The OHR, former British politician Paddy Ashdown, a former British Intelligence (M16) official, has, instead, focused on supporting Islamist agendas in Bosnia and has - by attempting to only pursue alleged war criminals from the Serbian side of the Bosnian civil war - actively facilitated the activities of such organizations as Kvadrat.

Footnote: Al Haramain
1. On September 9, 2004, the US Treasury Department issued a statement (JS-1895), entitled US-Based Branch of Al Haramain Foundation Linked to Terror; Treasury Designates US Branch, Director. That statement noted:

The Treasury Department announced today the designation [as a terrorist-linked organization] of the US branch of the Saudi Arabia-based Al-Haramain Islamic Foundation (AHF), along with one of its directors, Suliman Al-Buthe [an Egyptian by birth]. In addition, the AHF branch located in the Union of the Comoros was also designated today.

“We continue to use all relevant powers of the US Government to pursue and identify the channels of terrorist financing, such as corrupted charities, at home and abroad. Al-Haramain has been used around the world to underwrite terror, therefore we have taken this action to excommunicate these two branches and Suliman Al-Buthe from the worldwide financial community,” said Stuart Levey, Treasury’s Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence.

The assets of the US AHF branch, which is headquartered in Oregon, were blocked pending investigation on February 19, 2004. On the previous day, a Federal search warrant was executed against all property purchased on behalf of the US AHF branch. The investigation involved agents from the Internal Revenue Service - Criminal Investigations (IRS-CI), the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Department of Homeland Security’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

The US-based branch of AHF was formally established in 1997. Documents naming Al-Buthe as the organization’s attorney and providing him with broad legal authority were signed by Aqeel Abdul Aziz Al-Aqil, the former director of AHF. Aqil has been designated by the US and the UN 1267 Sanctions Committee because of AHF’s support for al-Qaida while under his oversight.

The investigation shows direct links between the US branch and Osama bin Laden. In addition, the affidavit alleges the US branch of AHF criminally violated tax laws and engaged in other money laundering offenses. … [I]ndividuals associated with the branch tried to conceal the movement of funds intended for Chechnya by omitting them from tax returns and mischaracterizing their use, which they claimed was for the purchase of a prayer house in Springfield, Missouri.

Other information available to the US shows that funds that were donated to AHF with the intention of supporting Chechen refugees were diverted to support mujahedin, as well as Chechen leaders affiliated with al-Qaida.

AHF has operations throughout the Union of the Comoros, and information shows that two associates of AHF Comoros are linked to al-Qaida. According to the transcript from US v. Bin Laden, the Union of the Comoros was used as a staging area and exfiltration route for the perpetrators of the 1998 bombings of the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. The AHF branches in Kenya and Tanzania have been previously designated for providing financial and other operational support to these terrorist attacks.

Since March 2002, the United States and Saudi Arabia have jointly designated eleven branches of AHF based on evidence of financial, material and/or logistical support to the al-Qaida network and affiliated organizations. These branches, Afghanistan, Albania, Bangladesh, Bosnia, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Kenya, the Netherlands, Pakistan, Somalia, and Tanzania, along with the former director of AHF, Aqeel Abdul Aziz Al-Aqil, are named on the UN’s 1267 Committee’s consolidated list of terrorists associated with al-Qaida, Osama bin Laden and the Taliban and are subject to international sanctions.

In June of 2004, the Saudi Government announced that it was dissolving AHF and other Saudi charities and committees operating abroad and folding their assets into a newly created entity, the Saudi National Commission for Relief and Charity Work Abroad. According to the Saudi Embassy, the Commission, a non-governmental body, will take over all aspects of private overseas aid operations and assume responsibility for the distribution of private charitable donations from Saudi Arabia.

The US State Dept. on June 2, 2004, noted:
The United States is designating today, June 2 [2004], five branches of the Al-Haramain Foundation as well as the organization’s former leader, Aqeel Abdul Aziz Al-Aqil, as terrorist financers, based on evidence of their links to al-Qaida. These designations are part of our ongoing effort to cut off terrorist funding and to ensure that charitable funds are not diverted to individuals or organizations involved in terrorism. The United States and Saudi Arabia will also be submitting the names of the branches to the UN 1267 Sanctions Committee for inclusion on the committee’s list. Once the names are included on the list, all UN member states will be obliged to freeze their assets and implement other sanctions.

Efforts to deprive terrorists of the funds they need to operate and recruit can only be effective with strong international cooperation. Today’s actions, undertaken jointly with the Government of Saudi Arabia, are an example of the important steps we must continue to take if we are to be successful in our efforts. We have previously submitted for UN designation six branches of Al-Haramain with Saudi Arabia (Bosnia, Somalia, Indonesia, Pakistan, Kenya and Tanzania), as well as Vazir, the successor to the Bosnian branch:

Designation of Bosnian and Somali branches on March 11, 2002;
Designation of Vazir, alias/successor to the Bosnia Al-Haramain office on December 22, 2003;
Designation of Indonesian, Pakistani, Tanzanian and Kenyan branches on January 22, 2004.

The US and Saudi Arabia last year [2003] formed a Joint Task Force on Terrorism Finance to identify and act against terrorist financing. … Saudi Arabia has undertaken additional meaningful steps to combat terrorist financing: Saudi banks are implementing strict “know your customer” rules and the Saudis have taken steps to prevent the misuse of charities. Saudi Arabia’s creation of a Charity Commission that will assume oversight responsibility for Saudi-based charities marks a clear step toward increasing transparency and accountability in a sector that has unfortunately been exploited by terrorists to the detriment of both well-intentioned donors and needy recipients.

The US website FrontPage Magazine on September 16, 2003, noted: “In September 2002, Indonesian al-Qaida informant Omar al-Faruq told the CIA that Al-Haramain was used to remit funds to him from bin Laden. Al Haramain’s website used to have a direct link to qoqaz.net, which is a website that is part of the al-Qaida propaganda network. The website is owned by Azzam Publications, bin Laden’s propaganda vehicle, and operated from Houston Texas. Al-Haramain is also involved with the Al Baraka banking empire, which was also named in the 9/11 lawsuit. Al-Baraka finances the activities of bin Laden and al-Qaida. In his Senate testimony in July 2003, terrorism expert Steve Emerson said that although initially Saudi Arabia denied allegations that Al-Haramain were involved in terrorist activities, in June (2003) they stated that Al-Haramain was not acting according to its charter and announced that all foreign offices were to be closed. Emerson did remark that the Ashland [Oregon] office was still in operation. Al-Haramain has another location in the United States.

According to the 9/11 complaint, Al-Haramain owns a building in Springfield, Missouri that is home of the Islamic Center of Springfield, which is a mosque.”

In June 2004, after Saudi Arabia officially dissolved Al-Haramain, the organization said that its works, henceforth, would only be inside Saudi Arabia.


Copyright 2004 Defense & Foreign Affairs Strategic Policy
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Dr Darko Trifunovic - Bosnia and terrorism : Mufti Mustafa Ceric tells the West " I am proud that Islam defines my European patriotism"

Bosnia and terrorism : Mufti Mustafa Ceric tells the West " I am proud that Islam defines my European patriotism"

Bosnia as launching pad for international terrorism - the Abdel Rahman - Bin Laden connection
February 21, 2005

Dr Mustafa Ceric: Came to prominence during Balkans wars

MIM: Ceric made it clear in a recent interview (see below) that he sees the UK as one of the first 'trophies' in the Islamisation of Europe. He is falsely presented as a 'man of peace' and his visit was reported as an effort to 'increase understanding' of Muslims position in Europe. His words are clearly a call for Muslims to further insinuate themselves into the social and political institutions in the West. He also expressed his pleasure at the increasing dhimmitude he found in the UK 'praising' Britain's accomodation of Islam and Muslims.

"They (Muslims) know where they stand in this society"-they have the freedom to oppose the government for instance, over the war in Iraq" -"London is good place for us to discuss what the third encounter will mean".

This encounter does not mean giving up an Islamic identity, he says. This future Western Muslim identity will represent neither assimilation nor isolation, but co-operation."

He then warns that :."...governments must essentially buy the trust of Muslims by institutionalising their faith - giving it state sponsorship through schools, official bodies and so on..."

"...Muslims don't like this idea, they think that governments would control them," he says. "But, my dear brothers, I say you are losing your sovereignty already if they [the police] are entering your homes and mosques..."

----------------------------------------

MIM: Mustafa Ceric the Grand Mufti of Bosnia, counts among his international activities membership and participation in with radical Islamist individuals and organisations also based in the United States. http://www.naqshbandi.net/haqqani/events/speakers.html

Mustapha Ceric is listed as board member of the Center for Balanced Development, which was founded by the Austrian Islamo facist Hans Koechler . The board includes John Esposito and Louay Safi. http://www.i-p-o.org/cbd.htm

Ceric is also works with the UK branch of the AMSS - The Association of Muslim Social Scientists, which is the sister organisation of the IIIT the International Institute of Islamic Thought, a Wahhabist funded group which is being investigated for terrorism funding. http://www.militantislammonitor.org/article/id/214

As Grand Mufti of Bosnia , Ceric is also aligned with Yusuf Islam, aka Cat Stevens,who was recently banned from entering the United States because of links to terrorism funding. http://www.militantislammonitor.org/article/id/293

Islam's Muslim Aid 'charity' , was placed on a list by Spanish police in 2002 as a source of recruiting and funding for Muhajideen Al Qaeda fighters in Bosnia aka ' the white Al Qaeda'. http://artsweb.bham.ac.uk/bmms/1996/02February96.html#Bosnia%20visit

According to a recent Bosnian new report Mustafa Ceric also played a leading role in the CIRL,. a funding front which was organised by Osama bin Laden and Sheik Abdel Rahman, that funtioned as " the only link between the Bosnian Muslim political leadership of the time and its wealthy Islamic benefactors"."...key people in the CIRKL in charge of Bosnia as Dr. Fatih al Hassanein, Hasan Cengic, Salim Sabic, Muhamed Catic, Mustafa Ceric, Husein Zivalj, and Senad Sahinpasic. http://www.beta.co.yu/korupcija/eng/cist2.asp?ci=1159920

"...With the power of money the CIRKL formed an illegal ruling oligarchy..."Money was also allegedly used to "install the great imams Hasan Cengic and Mustafa Ceric through their militant muftis, the main ideological force of the Bosniak Muslim Party of Democratic Action and maker of its personnel policy."

The authors of the intelligence report expected this group to resort to "organized terrorist retribution" basing this assumption on the fact that "the CIRKL has undergone considerable financial consolidation and is linked to Middle Eastern extremist organizations..."

--------------------------------------------------------------------------

MIM: After 9/11 Ceric was in the forefront of crying discrimination when his Al Qaeda funding front was endangered the US started to close down Bosnian 'charities' http://www.mediareviewnet.com/BOSNIAs%20Islamic%20community%20accuses%20govt%20of%20discrimination.htm

SARAJEVO June 5 Sapa-AFP


Bosnia's Islamic community accused the country's authorities Wednesday of
discriminating against Muslim humanitarian organisations following the
anti-terror campaign launched after the September 11 attacks in the United
States.


"An atmosphere has been created here in which people stand accused of
terrorism even though not a single claim has been confirmed through
appropriate legal procedures," Mustafa Ceric, head of the Islamic community
in Bosnia, told a press conference.


Ceric voiced fears that beneficiaries of Islamic charities might suffer the
most, saying that people were coming "daily" to his offices asking "what
would happen to them if (Islamic) charities leave Bosnia...."

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/4283717.stm

Islamic encounters of the third kind

Friday prayers: Thousands attended Dr Ceric's sermon


Is Islam secure in Europe? One of the continent's leading Islamic thinkers says the future direction of Islam may depend on it being so.

You may not have heard of him, but the Grand Mufti of Bosnia is the kind of person who gets to have tea with the Prince of Wales.

On a whistle-stop speaking tour of London late last week, Dr Mustafa Ceric spent a morning debating the future of Islam and the West with Prince Charles.

And it's Dr Ceric's track record of pushing the boundaries of what is publicly sayable among Muslims that leads to such interest in his views.

The Grand Mufti is the leading Islamic legal authority among Muslims in the Balkans - some of his supporters have even dubbed him "Islam's Nelson Mandela".

He represents that strand of the faith that clung on in Europe after the Turkish Ottoman empire rolled back from the frontiers of the West.


It's difficult to admit but Muslims [in the Middle East] now need to learn from Muslims in the West - the wise men of the Islamic east and the rational men of the west must meet - and then we will have moral men

And so, with a European and Islamic heritage ("I am proud that Islam defines my European patriotism", he says) he is well placed to see where things are going.

He came to prominence during the bloody break-up of Yugoslavia by speaking out against those who used faith as a justification for violence.

Today he has an international reputation as a man of peace and is involved in efforts to counter fears about Islam in the United States in the wake of 9/11.

Rights and fears

Appearing in London to talk to British Muslims about their own fears amid security-related tensions, he says that they themselves may hold the key to the faith's future in the world. And London may be the arena where this Islamic identity is being formed.

So is Islam secure in Europe?

"We have two extremes of approach. One says that Muslims are not secure and that Europe is an anti-Islamic environment. The other extreme says Europe is a haven for Islam and Muslims," he says.


ISLAM AND THE WEST Early Baghdad thinkers developed Greek learning Islamic Spain re-introduced ideas to Europe European Muslims export ideas back East?

"I believe that the truth is somewhere in the middle because we are all in a process of learning.

"The West is learning about Muslims - trying to figure out what they are doing here in Europe and [asking questions such as] how should governments deal with this phenomenon."

"Well, we've been here for a long time - but the presence now is different to what it has been through history."

The difference, he argues, is that European-born Muslims are quietly embracing European notions of freedom and human rights. This can be seen no more clearly in the rise of young, professional - but religiously devout - Muslim women who challenge the idea that it's men who should have all the say.

But thanks to today's political and media climate, argues Dr Ceric, Muslims in the West need "freedom from fear and freedom from poverty" - both of which are undermining their position in the West.

"Europe is facing some kind of dilemma of fear [over Islam] and that Muslims themselves are seeking freedom from this fear.

"No-one knows where this process will lead - but if we are rational people we must accept the challenge of what I call the 'third encounter' between the West and Islam."

Moments of history

Dr Ceric says there have been two major historical moments when Islam and Western civilisation have met and changed each other.


GRAND MUFTI Born in Bosnia Studied at Cairo's top Al-Azhar University PhD in the USA Becomes Grand Mufti on return home A grand mufti is a leading Islamic scholar

During the first, Islam's early Baghdad philosophers preserved and developed the learning of the Greeks. During the second, these ideas and more were sent back to Europe via Islamic Spain, sowing some of the seeds for the Renaissance.

But this third meeting is different because it has the potential to change the nature of Islam itself. If European-born Muslims look inside their faith for what are presented as Western notions of human rights and individual freedom, they will find them, he argues.

The challenge will be to convince other Muslims that these ideas are universal - and then western Muslims can export them back to the heart of Islamic society.

"They cannot do it at the moment, but if they are given this freedom [from fear and poverty], they will succeed.

"It's difficult to admit but Muslims [in the Middle East] now need to learn from Muslims in the West.

"The wise men of the Islamic East and the rational men of the West must meet - and then we will have moral men."

London at the centre

The problem he faces however is that there is enormous resistance of the West coming from the East. The UK and London, however, will play a vital role in negotiating this tension, says Dr Ceric.

Its leading mosques are full most Fridays and many British-born or educated thinkers are urging their congregations to take the best of the West and put it to good use. "London is well-placed because of its history," says Dr Ceric. "And British Muslims are more emancipated than other European Muslims.

"They know where they stand in this society - they have freedom to oppose the government, for instance, over the war in Iraq. London is a good place for us to discuss what this third encounter will mean."

This encounter does not mean giving up an Islamic identity, he says. This future Western Muslim identity will represent neither assimilation nor isolation, but co-operation.

He likens the process to that experienced by British Jews: at first outsiders, they later became part of the fabric of society but have defended their identity and world view. In turn, that world view influences decisions of the state and international relations.

But Dr Ceric says the question is whether or not European governments are helping Muslims along this path.

Paris got into bother over its ban on religious symbols in schools - and London continues to face community criticisms that the anti-terror laws criminalise Muslims. Throughout Europe's capitals there is an emotive debate over modern multicultural societies and whether they trap people into religiously closed communities and encourage division?

Dr Ceric says governments must essentially buy the trust of Muslims by institutionalising their faith - giving it state sponsorship through schools, official bodies and so on. Resistance is a "tribal mentality" that allows others to present Muslims as alien outsiders.

"Muslims don't like this idea, they think that governments would control them," he says. "But, my dear brothers, I say you are losing your sovereignty already if they [the police] are entering your homes and mosques.

"I say let them in today because if not they will come in tomorrow and the consequences are a long-term bad image for Islam."

-----------------------

MIM: Political commentator Srdja Trifovic warns that "politically correct" Westerners unchallenged acceptance of Muslims distorted views of history and Muslim victimisation "is extremely dangerous".

"...Muslims, as Christians once did, tend to sympathize with each other in a familiar and more or less nationalist fashion. If this tendency goes unchecked it produces a lunatic account of world affairs in which Muslim societies are always victims of the West and always innocent. It is not just the extremists who believe that in Palestine, Chechnya, Bosnia, Kosovo, and Kashmir, the Muslims are entirely in the right: at present, almost every Muslim thinks so. The "politically correct" Westerners accept the Muslim judgment. But this is extremely dangerous, as the West cannot afford to concede such a large measure of moral approval to so self-conscious and agitated a force in world affairs..." http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/News/Trifkovic04/NewsST011004.html

-------------------------------------------------

http://www.beta.co.yu/korupcija/eng/cist2.asp?ci=1159920

MIM: Ceric declared in the article above that "I am proud that Islam defines my European patriotism".

It also appears to have been very lucrative for him as well. According to this recent article Ceric is linked to the CIRL , a funding operation "which was in charge of all aid donated to Bosniak Muslims by Islamic countries" The CIRL was started by Sheik Abdel Rahman and Osama Bin Laden.

"Information collected by Austrian and German intelligence agents and published in August 2004 in Banjaluka`s Patriot paper claims that Islamic terrorists, including Osama bin Laden and Sheik Rahman, organized CIRKL, ... The group was set up as the only link between the Bosnian Muslim political leadership of the time and its wealthy Islamic benefactors...

"...Instead of the Bosniak government, it was the illegal CIRKL that was in control of all aid donated to the Bosniak nation by Islamic countries. The Bosniak nation is 100 percent financially dependant on the CIRKL. The CIRKL is the absolute master of almost all hard currency," according to the intelligence document, which dates back to Nov. 6, 1995, and is labeled top secret.

The document also list the key people in the CIRKL in charge of Bosnia as Dr. Fatih al Hassanein, Hasan Cengic, Salim Sabic, Muhamed Catic, Mustafa Ceric, Husein Zivalj, and Senad Sahinpasic..."

---------------------------------------------------

"Bosnian Terror Assets moving to Iraq ,Afghanistan, to resist "War On Terror " as manoeuvering underway to replace Izetbegovic"

http://128.121.186.47/ISSA/reports/Balkan/Oct2703.htm

GIS/Defense & Foreign Affairs Daily sources in Bosnia reported on October 16, 2003, that a mujahedin training facility in Bosnia was now part of a process to send fighters into Iraq, through a network which involved transiting Turkey and Syria. The training was, according to the sources, taking place at a base near Tuzla, and some elements of a Turkish battalion based at Tuzla have reportedly played a significant rôle in the process of supporting the Islamist fighters.

If the sources are correct (and further investigation is now underway), then the movement of of Islamist fighters from Bosnia eastward would — apart from interaction between some mujahedin with Chechnya — be a significant milestone. It would also reflect that the al-Qaida and Iranian-backed Islamist infrastructure in the Balkans, built up since the beginning of the 1990s, was now being used as an integral part of the war against US forces in Iraq.

As well, there were indications that the Bosnian-based Islamists had also been used to support military operations against the anti-terrorist Coalition in Afghanistan..."

"...The final serious candidate to replace Alija Izetbegovic, according to Slobodna Bosna, was Mustafa Ceric, who is supported by the Islamic Religious Council (Ulema B-H), the religious part of SDA and some diplomats from Western countries..."
-------------------------------------------------------------------


Mustafa Ceric " I am proud that Islam defines my European patriotism"

WEALTH THROUGH PATRIOTISM

BANJALUKA, 27.1.2005. (Beta) - Over the past several months organized crime investigators with the Bosnia-Herzegovina Prosecutor`s Office have been scrutinizing high-ranking politician Hasan Cengic for financial abuse and involvement in organized crime.

John Mekner, head of the Special Chamber for Organized Crime of the Prosecutor`s Office, confirmed in a statement to BETA that the investigation of Cengic, a senior member of the Party of Democratic Action, is still in progress. However, he was unwilling to say whether the cabinet will stay in the hands of prosecutor Jonathan Smith, who recently left Bosnia on orders from Washington after receiving death threats.

"I do not think it is important which prosecutor handles the case and I will not comment on which cases have been delegated to the Special Chamber," said Mekner.

Mekner also did not want to discuss how much progress the investigation has made or whether Cengic is likely to be indicted anytime soon.

Embezzlement is suspected

Financial inspectors in the Muslim-Croat federation has found that Cengic took possession of at least $8 million in donations from Islamic countries that had arrived during the Bosnian war. He did this through an Islamic charity called the Third World Relief Agency to start and illegally fund several companies.

Foreign intelligence agencies have labeled Cengic as a key figure in the CIRKL, a clandestine Islamic organization that controlled all financial donations coming in from the Islamic world during the war.

Commenting on the allegations, Seada Palavric, a vice president of the Party of Democratic Action, called them more "in the series of lies and foolishness being said about him."

"If there were one inkling of truth in what is being written about Cengic, he would already be in prison. The Party of Democratic Action has no such information. On the contrary, we have entirely different data that shows Cengic never transferred any of the aid meant for the protection of Bosniaks during the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina," she told us.

She added that police investigated the party and its financial operations in recent years, as did numerous financial institutions, and never discovered anything that could be taken as indicating financial abuse.

Palavric also denied that her party has heard Cengic has been subject to a careful investigation by the Special Chamber for Organized Crime in recent months.

Lawyers aren`t criminals

She did, however, stress that nobody would be surprised to learn that Cengic is being investigated because "that would be yet another attempt to discredit the supporters of the army of Bosnia-Herzegovina and turn them into criminals."

Information collected by Austrian and German intelligence agents and published in August 2004 in Banjaluka`s Patriot paper claims that Islamic terrorists, including Osama bin Laden and Sheik Rahman, organized CIRKL, the Islamic group mentioned above, before the war. The group was set up as the only link between the Bosnian Muslim political leadership of the time and its wealthy Islamic benefactors.

"Instead of the Bosniak government, it was the illegal CIRKL that was in control of all aid donated to the Bosniak nation by Islamic countries. The Bosniak nation is 100 percent financially dependant on the CIRKL. The CIRKL is the absolute master of almost all hard currency," according to the intelligence document, which dates back to Nov. 6, 1995, and is labeled top secret.

The document also list the key people in the CIRKL in charge of Bosnia as Dr. Fatih al Hassanein, Hasan Cengic, Salim Sabic, Muhamed Catic, Mustafa Ceric, Husein Zivalj, and Senad Sahinpasic.

"With the power of money the CIRKL formed an illegal ruling oligarchy. This isolated and installed extremist Islamic clique consisting of 300-400 individuals, including militant imams, senior military officials, diplomats, government officials, senior officials of the Party of Democratic Action, and members of the intelligence community. They have forced themselves upon the Bosniak people," according to the document, parts of which were once published in the Slobodna Bosna paper.

Money was also allegedly used to "install the great imams Hasan Cengic and Mustafa Ceric through their militant muftis, the main ideological force of the Bosniak Muslim Party of Democratic Action and maker of its personnel policy."

The authors of the intelligence report expected this group to resort to "organized terrorist retribution" basing this assumption on the fact that "the CIRKL has undergone considerable financial consolidation and is linked to Middle Eastern extremist organizations."

The CIRKL expanded its influence by way of the Third World Relief Agency (TWRA), run by Sudanese Fatih al Hassanein.

Weapons instead of humanitarian aid

The Patriot newspaper also said that Hassanein used money he received from his government and the terrorist organizations of Bin Laden and Rahman to buy weapons for the Bosniak-led Army of Bosnia-Herzegovina. According to the paper, TWRA manager Hassanein supplied the army with weapons through the Croatian finance and defense ministries.

Hassanein founded the TWRA in 1987, when it was involved in collecting donations for the Muslim Brotherhood in Sudan.

Furthermore, the paper carried a copy of a document dated April 29, 1992, and approved by a special Muslim committee in Croatia in support of the then Republic of Bosnia-Herzegovina. The document confirms that the committee received "$300,000 from Kemal Sarag Al-Din and Fatih Al Hassanein for buying weapons that are to be sent to Bosnia- Herzegovina."

"The weapons are to be purchased through the Croatian finance and defense ministries, which has already been agreed with the government of Bosnia-Herzegovina."

Intelligence data also indicates that over $2.5 billion reached the TWRA from Islamic countries and that on July 10, 1992, then Bosnian Foreign Minister Haris Silajdzic signed a paper authorizing Al Hassanein and the TWRA to collect donations for refugees in Bosnia- Herzegovina.

Instead of humanitarian aid, the money was used to organize illegal shipments of arms from Western countries to Bosnia-Herzegovina

After the Sept. 11, 2001, attack in New York City, the U.S. ordered an investigation into all Islamic humanitarian relief agencies in Bosnia, including the TWRA.

The TWRA was also probed by German and Austrian police.

Most of the donated Islamic money was used by the senior officials of the CIRKL for personal gain and buying weapons, according to the documents.

In 1991 and 1992, after illegally purchasing weapons, largely through Croatia, the CIRKL distributed it to Muslim extremists in Bosnia and in Serbia`s Sandzak region.

Well-informed sources say Hasan Cengic was the organizer of this operation.

Financial scams

Reports from financial investigators state that in February 1996, Cengic founded a humanitarian organization called the Foundation for Assistance to the Bosnian Muslims as a front.

Its top officials were Irfan Ljevakovic, Husein Zivalj, and Dervis Djurdjevic, the same men who had been in charge of the money al Hassanein had been funneling into Bosnia via the TWRA.

Immediately after its founding, the organization received EUR2.4 million in starting capital. In May that year Cengic and Hassanein had a meeting in Istanbul, where the Sudanese had taken up living after being deported by Austria. They signed a contract granting Cengic`s alleged humanitarian organization EUR2.4 million worth of trucks.

The trucks were supposedly to be used to transport humanitarian aid, but they were immediately transferred to Cengic`s company, Bosanska Investiciona Organizacija (BIO).

To cover its tracks, BIO started Bosanski Transprotni Servis, a shipping firm, and invested the trucks as founding capital.

Afterwards the Foundation for Assistance to the Bosnian Muslims purchased an AN-74 transport plane, which was immediately given to BIO.

Investigators have learned that the price given for the plane, $300,000, was unrealistic and that its real value was 10 times that figure: $3 million.

Seeking his personal airport

The plane, of course, was not used for the transport of humanitarian aid. Instead, it was used for commercial purposes. According to newspaper reports, Cengic has a fleet of five planes.

Since neither the trucks nor the planes went through customs, the Muslim-Croat federation was left several million euros short of revenues.

According to media reports, Cengic`s goal was to secure the airport in Visoko near Sarajevo, which would have given him control of Bosnia`s entire civil aviation sector.

At a meeting in Zagreb on Aug. 15, 1997, an international community committee for assistance to the Bosnian Muslims voted to transfer all of the organization`s investments in the Visoko airport to BIO. This gave Cengic`s company a majority stake in the airport and within a very short time it had invested almost EUR19 million in the facility.

The airport takeover contract was signed by Salim Sabic, a former adviser to wartime Bosnian president Alija Izetbegovic and key figure in the CIRKL in Croatia, on behalf of BIO.

Cengic is believed by many to be one of the richest men in Bosnia.

In May 2003 the U.S. barred Cengic from entry, froze his assets, and prohibited any U.S. company from doing business with him after he became suspected of obstruction of the Dayton peace agreement and ties with Islamic terrorists.

------------------

http://www.muslimedia.com/archives/special98/random.htm

MIM: Excerpts from Post Dayton pre election Bosnia details the swearing in of Ceric who spoke "free of the constraints that the presence of non- Muslims had imposed elsewhere".

Not until one sees the cemeteries can one comprehend the scale of the slaughter and the selfless sacrifice of the young men who left for the front. Not even the acres of graves in Behisht-e Zahra outside Tehran can prepare one for the poignancy of Bosnian cemeteries. Only when I saw them did I fully appreciate what Ejup Ganic, the vice president, had said to us a few days earlier about 'the young men who went to the front knowing it was not likely they would return.' These were the flowers of a generation, Bosnia's hope for the future, for in a war it is always the best who get killed.

Ejup Ganic's reference to the shuhada occurred during a speech on the occasion of a dinner to honour the foreign guests who attended Mustafa Ceric's installation as Ra'is al-Ulama. The elegance of the setting, the well-trained waiters all spoke the influence of the old Austro-Hungarian empire; graciousness and charm shone throughout.

Ejup Ganic spoke without a single mistake in English grammar for some 10 or 15 minutes. After an interval, for the dinner was friendly and informal, he was followed by Dr Ceric, remembered by many in Britain as the man whose discourse at the Muslim Parliament had reduced people to tears. He spoke brilliantly, totally at ease, free of the constraints that the presence of non-Muslims had imposed elsewhere, touching the hearts and minds of everyone present.

------------------------

MIM: In 1997 Mustafa Ceric dined with, and personally thanked Yusuf Islam aka Cat Stevens, for the help and support of "the Muslim community in Britain". Islam had just launched his Muslim Aid 'charity' funding front and had been the treasurer of the Muslim Council of Britain at the time. Last year Islam was barred from entering the U.S. on grounds that he posted 'a security threat' and was involved with terrorism funding. Besides Hamas, the main focus of Islam's 'charitable' activities has been Bosnia. In 2002 the Spanish police cited Islam and Muslim Aid as being behind the funding and recruitment of Al Qaeda muhajideen in Bosnia . http://www.militantislammonitor.org/article/id/293

http://www.webstar.co.uk/~musnews/alond102.html

Around London with Rais al-'Ulama

By Betul Iyilik

Dr Mustafa Ceric, Rais al-'Ulama (Supreme Head of the Islamic Community) in Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH), on an official visit to London between September 23 to 26, held meeetings with leaders of various faith groups. On the first day of his visit, Dr Ceric, who was the guest of the Foreign Office, was met by Dr George Carey, Archbishop of Canterbury and Canon Richard Marsh, the Archbishop's Secretary for Ecumenical Affairs. They discussed issues of "mutual interest". He also met and had dinner with Tom Phillips, Head of Eastern Adriatic Department and Mr Dominic Micklejohn Head of Bosnia Section. On the second day, Mustafa Ceric visited the Bosnia and Herzegovina Islamic Centre in north-west London, and met Imam Fahruddin Hamidovic and representatives of the Bosnian community. Dr Ceric was briefed about the Centre, which was opened two years ago. The activities of the Centre are wide.They include supplementary primary school in the Bosnian language and religious education, humanitarian activities and other community work. The Centre is also a focal point for the Bosnian refugees. The purpose of the meeting was to establish a better link between the Bosnian community in the United Kingdom and the Supreme Islamic Council in BiH. It was agreed that the Centre will become an official Bosnian organisation in the UK. It will also search for a suitable and larger premises that will become the permanent centre for the Bosnian community. At the meeting, Dr Mustafa Ceric discussed the current situation in Bosnia, including the repatriation of the Bosnian refugees, described as "a long term process with a number of problems".

The other part of the meeting was with Yusuf Islam. Dr Ceric thanked, on behalf of the people of Bosnia, the Muslim community in Britain for their help and support. The Rais al-'Ulama added that inspite of the "incredibly difficult years, we are still alive and we are ready to face to the future". He said that during his visit to South Africa, he was asked whether the suffering of the Bosnians was a punishment from Allah for their sins. Dr Ceric replied:"God does not punish those who are weak, he punishes those who are strong, and I don't believe that we have committed more sins than the rest of the world or that we are stronger than rest of the world." He reminded the Muslims world-wide that as Muslims "we need to take care of ourselves and not to wait for some body else to come and rescue you. So it is the time to wake up and accept our responsibilities". He added that Muslims in the West have to "use the freedom and democracy to participate in the society so that your voice can be heard and it can be helpful to us". In the afternoon Dr Ceric was the guest of the Calamus Foundation in central London where he briefed the members of the Foundation about the latest situation in Bosnia and summed it up thus: "Bosnia is like a very beautiful lady whose face has been destroyed by hatred and unfortunately I don't think it will ever be the same as it used to be. What we are doing at the moment is to try to bandage the face. We will perform plastic surgery on the face but she needs a miracle. However I see in the near future that the lady is going to give birth to a new lady who will be more beautiful than her mother."

The Rais al-'Ulama had a dinner engagement with Yusuf Islam where a number of Muslim activists were invited. He recalled his encounter with a Christian priest from Lebanon who asked if the Muslim leadership intended to implement Shari'ah in BiH. "I told him that he was violating my human rights by asking me this question." Dr Ceric added: "Of course, I am going to apply Shari'ah. People generally consider Islam as beautifull (tourists visit mosques to admire their beauty), this is good. But Islam is first and foremost a religion of Law." He explained to the priest Islamic political theory. Muslims live in three territories: Dar al-Islam, Dar al-Harb and Dar al-Islah. In the first case, Muslims are obliged to implement Shari'ah. In Dar al-Islam Muslims have peace and security, freedom and dignity. In Dar al-Harb Muslims have no human rights and in Dar al-Islah Muslims implement Islam to the maximum of their ability. BiH comes under the latter category, explained Dr Ceric. "We live under Aqd al-ijtima' (Contract of Agreement)." He then told the priest that as a dhimmi the Christians can live under Muslim protection. "I wish Christianity had similar laws so that we could be protected - protected against rapes, killings and expulsions, as happened in BiH." Dr Ceric acknowledged the help given to Bosnia by Muslim governments: "If it wasn't for the help from the Islamic governments BiH would not have survived."

On the third day of his visit, Dr Ceric went to Islamic Relief World Wide Foundation offices in London. They have been working in BiH since before the invasion by Serbia in 1992. Dr Ceric expressed his admiration for the humanitarian work Islamic Relief undertook during the course of the war and for its continuing efforts through the numerous development projects that have been put into action since the conclusion of the conflict. He said: "Many agencies withdrew their support for the Bosnian people following the Dayton Peace Accord, although it is well known that following a conflict there is still much work to be done and suffering to be endured." Islamic Relief's projects include fish farm, medical aid for disabled people, women's community and training centre and Planaka Goat Project (in Bihac). In the evening, the Rais al-'Ulama met the members of the UK Action Committee on Islamic Affairs at the Central Mosque in Regents Park, London. Dr Ceric asked why was it that now non-Muslims do not want to live with Muslims in Bosnia. "We should examine why they don't want to live in Muslim environment. Is something wrong with them or with us? If the problem is with them, we shouldn't worry about it, but if it is with us it means we have to find an answer to solve the problem."

According to Dr Ceric an inter-faith council has been set up in Sarajevo headed By Jacob Finzi, a Bosnian Jew and Cardinal Vinko Puljic, Archbishop of Sarajevo, Ortodox Metropolitan Nikolai of Dabar and Dr Ceric. The aim of the Council is to break down to the barriers between faiths which have been exacerbated by the fighting in Bosnia. The Rais believes that the only way out in the inter-faith dialogue is for Christianity to "develop the idea of recognition" and for Muslims to "develop the idea of tolerance" and "if we swap the ideas then we can meet in the middle of somewhere". He added that Bosnia, especially Sarajevo, "is still the biggest market for different ideas - Nationalism, Fascism, Democracy and Capitalism. All national religions, political movements, every kind of organisation from the world are there." He said he was hopeful since the elections and he said the international community, who "were irresponsible before when they waited till Karadjic finished his job", is now taking its job more seriously. "Fortunately Karadjic did not succeed," he added. Dr Ceric believed that although the Dayton Accord "was not just", it did stop the war. There are four conditions essential for the peace process: war criminals should be brought to the War Crimes Tribunal in the Hague, freedom of movement should be established, media should be free and refugees should be allowed to return to their homes. On the last day of his visit, Dr Ceric attended a conference at The Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies, which, The Muslims News was told was "a closed meeting". Other engagements included meetings at: Maimonides Foundation, London Islamic Cultural Centre, University of Kingston and Interfaith Foundation.

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MIM: Srdja Trifkovic sums up the radical Islamist weltaanshauung of Ceric . The Mufti epitomises the new 'European' Muslim. Schooled in Shari'a at the Al Azhar- the alma mater of Adullah Azzam, Bin Laden's mentor and home to the Muslim Brotherhood, with a Phd in Islamic studies from the University of Chicago.

"...Where does more than a decade of U.S. involvement leave the Balkans? "The small jihad is now finished and we have—some of us—survived the war. The Bosnian state is intact. But now we have to fight a bigger, second jihad," says Mustafa Ceric, the Reis-ul-Ulema in Bosnia-Herzegovina—educated, incidentally, at Al-Azhar in Cairo and the University of Chicago..."

http://www.grecoreport.com/the_balkan_terror_threat.htm

The Balkan Terror Threat

by Srdja Trifkovic

A chain is as strong as its weakest link. In President Bush's "War on Terror," that weak link is not in the Middle East or North Africa or the Subcontinent but in Europe. For years Chronicles has been warning that flawed pro-Muslim Western policies would turn the Balkans from a "protectorate of the New World Order into an Islamic threat to Western interests." ... Such warnings were routinely ignored or discounted by the media and politicians alike. This attitude is rapidly changing, however. A spate of media reports and statements by Western officials over the past two months indicates that the threat is finally being taken seriously.

"U.S. to build Balkan anti-terrorism center in Bulgaria," news agencies reported on January 6, to monitor and detect terrorist threats to the United States and other countries. In addition to the CIA-staffed center, Bulgarian media reported, the FBI also plans to set up an office in Sofia. U.S. intelligence experts were quoted as saying that Al Qaeda has a training base in the Balkans and uses the region as a terror route to the West.

That same week, an Associated Press report warned that terrorists would use the Balkan route to sneak a nuclear weapon into Europe by land. Tom Sanderson of the Center for Strategic and International Studies and Chris Wright of the Royal Institute of International Affairs in London claimed that smuggling routes through Southeastern Europe were well established and that there was "a lot of scope" for collusion between terrorist groups and criminal gangs. Both criminals and terrorists benefit from heroin trafficking, most of it of Afghan origin. The trade is largely controlled by Albanian Muslims, with the mujahideen providing the logistics.

Der Spiegel reported on December 8, 2003, that the "monstrous" King Fahd mosque in Sarajevo -- the largest in Europe, on which the Saudis spent a total of $20 million -- is a breeding ground for Islamic extremism in Bosnia, with some preachers openly inciting the faithful. Western security experts have said that Bosnia could become "a hotbed of extremists ready to ... carry the fight of the Islamic terror syndicates against the 'godless West' to the southeast of Europe"(1).

This gives cause for "extreme concern" to a German intelligence chief, August Hanning. Der Spiegel goes on to quote a French expert as saying that, of some 5,000 foreign mujahideen who had fought on behalf of Izetbegovic [in Bosnia], many remained behind. The number is unknown, but there are "too many to be safe," according to George Friedman, director of Stratfor, The Balkans are "of strategic importance" to Al Qaeda, he says, and it can use the region for its goals at any time. Western officials reflect such concerns with increasing frequency. The U.S. ambassador in Sarajevo, Clifford Bond, thus declared on December 17 that there is a terrorist threat in Bosnia because of "foreign elements" who arrived there during the war and stayed on. In the same week, the cabinet of Greece's Prime Minister Costas Simitis expressed concern over the threat from Bosnia to the Olympic Games [sic] in August 2004 (2).

"U.N. Adds Bosnian Charity Director to Al Qaeda List," Reuters reported only days later. Safet Durguti, an Albanian born in Kosovo, was added to the list of 300 individuals whose assets should be frozen because of suspected ties to Osama bin Laden or his Al Qaeda network. Durgati -- apparently the key link between Islamic fundamentalists in Kosovo and Bosnia -- is the director of Vazir, a charity based in the Bosnian city of Travnik. According to the U.S. Department of the Treasury, Vazir was simply another name for the Al-Haramain Islamic Foundation, a Saudi charity that was placed on the U. N. list in March 2002.

Dozens of similar statements and articles appeared in different Western sources last January alone. Policy analysts and government officials alike freely admit that the problem exists. It has acquired massive proportions and may not be easily managed any longer. Whether it can be resolved short of a major restructuring of the current Balkan architecture is unclear.

The threat is not limited to a few elusive extremists: The ruling establishment in Sarajevo has had a symbiotic relationship with the sources of Islamic radicalism for over a decade. "Iran, Bosnia to Expand Ties," reported Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting on December 21, regarding a meeting of the Bosnian ambassador to Tehran, Ibrahim Efendic, and Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani. The latter said that "the jihad of the Bosnian and Palestinian nations is praiseworthy and a source of honor for Muslims":

The resistance and faith of these nations will be registered in the history of Islam,

he added ... Highlighting the geographical status of the Balkans, Rafsanjani said

Iran attaches great importance to Bosnia and Herzegovina and expressed the hope

to witness further expansion of bilateral ties between the two countries. The out-

going Bosnian ambassador lauded the humanitarian aid rendered by the Islamic

Republic of Iran.

The significance of this overlooked story is that Bosnian Muslim government officials are received and treated in Tehran as allies in a jihad and that Muslims see Bosnia as no less important than Palestine to their strategic design. As for Iran's "humanitarian aid," this is a euphemism for illegal arms shipments from Tehran to Sarajevo in 1994. They were carried out with the active connivance of the Clinton administration and in violation of the arms embargo initially demanded by Clinton. Along with the weapons, Iranian Revolutionary Guards and VEVAK intelligence agents entered Bosnia in large numbers.

The problem of collusion between U.S. administrations and Islamic radicals antedates the wars of Yugoslav succession. Its roots go back to the support Osama bin Laden and others received from the United States following the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979. Mistaken and shortsighted as this strategy turned out to be, it may have been justified by the dictates of the Cold War. The underlying assumption was that militant Muslims could be used and discarded -- like Diem, Noriega, the Shah, and the Contras. For the ensuing two decades, Washington almost invariably supported the Muslims -- most notably in Bosnia and Kosovo. By January 1996, [neocons] Jacob Heilbrunn and Michael Lind of the New Republic approvingly wrote of the U.S. role as the leader of Muslim nations from the Persian Gulf to the Balkans, with the Ottoman lands becoming "the heart of a third American empire"(3).

The strategists who had sought to turn militant Islam into a pliant tool had underestimated the danger of "blowback" at first, but over the years, they have bound good men to bad policy and reinforced failure with gold. Their strategy of effective support for Islamic ambitions in pursuit of short-term political or military objectives has helped to turn Islamic radicalism into a truly global phenomenon.

The Bosnian chapter of this strategy dates back to the administration of President George H. W. Bush, whose Acting Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger made it clear in early 1992 that his goal was to support the Muslim side in Bosnia in order to mollify the Muslim world and to counter any perception of an anti-Muslim bias regarding American policies in the Middle East. President Clinton's policy in the Balkans further strengthened an already aggressive Islamic base in the heart of Europe. The unspoken assumption of the architects of such policies -- that generosity would be rewarded by loyalty -- is mistaken: Loyalty to unbelievers is not a Muslim trait. As Yohanan Ramati has remarked, Muslim pragmatism "prescribes that when dealing with fools, one milks them for all one can get."

The subsequent portrayal in the Western media of Muslims as innocent martyrs in the cause of multicultural tolerance concealed the fact that the Bosnian war was primarily religious in nature. "The small jihad is now finished ... but now we have to fight a bigger, second jihad," Mustafa Ceric, the Reis-ul-Ulema (supreme Muslim cleric) of Bosnia-Herzegovina declared when the November 1995 Dayton Accords were signed. They specifically called for the expulsion of all foreign fighters, but the Muslim-controlled Sarajevo government circumvented the rule by granting Bosnian citizenship and passports to unknown numbers of mujahideen. The result was over a dozen executed or planned outrages -- from a shootout in Lille to a terrorist cell in Montreal, from the planned attack on Los Angeles International Airport to a series of explosions in Morocco and Istanbul in 2003. All were directly traced to the Bosnian connection.

That connection will not go away unless Western policies change. The first step for the Bush administration would be to scrutinize the activities of the high representative in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Paddy Ashdown of Great Britain. This failed social-democratic politician spent the Bosnian war acting as an advocate for the Muslim side, which he glorified as a paragon of multiethnic tolerance, and, to this day, he continues to deny the Muslim terrorist threat in his Balkan fiefdom. His behavior is reprehensible but not surprising. Politicians hate admitting that they have been wrong; in addition, Ashdown's acceptance of reality would make his current position untenable -- which must be a cause of some anxiety to a 50-something man with no alternative employment, no independent means, and no prospects.

Ashdown's motives in denying the Bosnian reality matter less than the consequences of his actions for the security of the Western world. Especially serious is his current effort to terminate the autonomous intelligence capability of the Serbian entity in Bosnia, Republika Srpska (RS), by integrating it with the secret service of the Muslim entity. Over the years, the RS security service has compiled a comprehensive database detailing the activities of Islamic terrorists and the identities of their sympathizers and active supporters in Bosnia-Herzegovina, including many high-ranking government officials. Forcing it into union with the Muslim security service would deny the Serb entity the capability to track terrorist-related activities and would help the Muslim side to cover up its involvement with terrorists.

Ashdown's deputy and enthusiastic assistant in the piecemeal liquidation of the Republika Srpska is American diplomat Donald Hays, a Democrat who owed his rise to the Clinton administration -- specifically, to Richard Holbrooke. In October 2003, Hays escorted his former boss Holbrooke around Bosnia, reportedly introducing him as "the next U.S. Secretary of State." According to a report by the International Strategic Studies Association, Hays' motive for attempting to suppress the links between the Islamic establishment in Sarajevo and radical Muslims is partly domestic. He wants to avoid the embarrassment of having the Clinton administration's links to the terrorists in Bosnia and Kosovo brought to light in an election year (4). ...

Recalling Hays and demanding Ashdown's replacement would be a cost-free exercise in prudence by the Bush administration and a long-overdue major step toward countering the terrorist threat in the Balkans. To make that step meaningful, however, it would be necessary to understand the nature of past errors. A generation ago, it was understandable, even excusable, for policymakers in Washington to try to use Muslims in their fight against communism in just the way their predecessors tried to use the Church in Italy in the early 1950's. By now, however, it should be evident that appeasement only breeds the contempt and arrogance of the radicals and fuels their ambition. The West is in a war of religion, whether she wants that or not, and the enemy sees the Balkans as a battlefield (5).

On the Islamic side, this war is being fought in the belief that the West is on her last legs, demographically and culturally. Some leaders -- including President Bush -- may have been hoping to domesticate Islam under the aegis of the nondenominational deism that they profess. That will fail, and an "internal reform" of Islam will remain as elusive as ever. Any potential for internal reform is only undermined by the appeasement of radical Islam in the Balkans. It enhances a downward spiral of hate and spite and breeds more terrorism.

Western policy in the Balkans should be reappraised, because to continue encouraging the Muslim sense of pure victimhood is to feed would-be-suicide bombers with a political pap that nourishes their hate. If the War on Terror is to be meaningful, that appeasement must stop. Pandering to Islam's geopolitical designs -- in the Balkans or anywhere else -- and sacrificing smaller Christian nations in the process is not only bad, it is counterproductive: The morsels only whet the extremists' appetite, paving the way to a major global confrontation well before this century is over.

----------------------------------------------

MIM: In 1981 Mustafa Ceric became the Imam of the ICC in Chicago and received his doctorate in Islamic studies fromt he University of Chicago in 1986 .This webpage about the Bosnian American Cultural Association details their fundraising activities on behalf of Muslims in Bosnia and show that Ceric has longstanding ties to the United States.

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&c2coff=1&q=mustafa+ceric+muslim+aid+&btnG=Search

BOSNIAN-AMERICAN CULTURAL ASSOCIATION,INC.
1810 N. Pfingsten Road,
Northbrook, IL 60062
Tel. (847)272-0319
Fax : (847)272-0348

In the name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful!

The Bosnian-American Cultural Association, Inc. (BACA) has a long and rich history in the Chicago Metropolitan area as a center for the Muslims from Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Balkans, and other areas, who came mostly as immigrants to the USA. This is the most important and the most prominent organization of Bosnian Muslims, not only in the Chicago area, but in the entire USA. The principal BACA headquarters are located at 1810 N. Pfingsten Road, Northbrook, IL. BACA holds the sole beneficial ownership of that land, its structures and its facilities.


The first Muslim immigrants from Bosnia and Herzegovina, known as BOSNIACS, or simply Bosnians, came to the USA, mostly to Chicago, in 1903 in search of greater economic opportunities and greater freedom. They were young, single and of limited education, but willing to accept the hardest jobs. The first newcomers were greeted by local boys with showers of stones and catcalls of "damned Turks," because many of them wore their native hats, called "fezzes". But being quick learners they adjusted their clothing and behavior very quickly to the new country. Already, on May 1, 1906, they founded the first Bosnian fraternal organization in the USA, under the name of Dzemijetul Hajrije of Illinois (The Benevolent Society), which was later registered by the Secretary of State on July 9, 1906. This is the oldest existing Muslim organization in the USA. Its original charter has been appropriately treasured in the BACA/ICC Museum. Its members organized chapters in other states and purchased cemetery lots. Their purpose was to provide mutual help to their members, especially to pay hospital bills, to make Muslim funeral arrangements, to organize celebrations of Muslim religious holidays and to help preserve their religious and national customs and traditions. Their meeting places were mostly Bosnian coffee houses which they frequented to talk and joke in Bosnian, to eat Bosnian ethnic dishes and to exchange job referrals with each other. They contributed to the growth of Chicago as construction crews working mostly on downtown buildings, railroads, roads, and in the mining and steel industries. They became renowned builders after they completed several difficult projects in the Chicago subway system. After World War II, the second wave of Bosnian immigrants arrived in the USA, mostly in Chicago. The old timers had some temporary or visiting Imams (religious ministers) to serve their needs, but with the arrival of new immigrants a need for a well qualified and permanent Imam became more urgent. They invited and sponsored Sheik Kamil Avdich, a well known Bosnian Muslim scholar who had earned the Alimya with Royal Decree from the Al-Azhar University in Cairo, Egypt, but who refused to return to communist Yugoslavia.

Imam Kamil arrived in February 1954 and on May 3, 1954, he and other Bosnians founded a new organization, the "Muslim Religious and Cultural Home", which was later registered on March 14, 1955, with Imam Kamil Avdich as its first president and Safet Sarich, who was from the first generation of Bosnians born and educated in the U.S., as its first secretary. Cadi Seid ef. Karic, a very prominent Bosnian, was Imam Kamil's first assistant. They collected donations from Bosnians and on August 15, 1956 they purchased two buildings at 1800 N. Halsted, Chicago, IL., for $36,000. With the volunteer work of their enthusiastic members they remodeled a large hall in the larger building into the first mosque, which opened on February 10, 1957. This was the first Muslim institution in the Chicago area which served Bosnians and all other Muslims. It remained open for almost 20 years. On September 12, 1968, the name was changed to the Bosnian-American Cultural Association, abbreviated BACA, and Imam Kamil was again elected as its president. However, soon the building could no longer meet the needs of the growing BACA membership. On July 20, 1971, BACA purchased, for about $45,000, two-acres of vacant land at 1810 N. Pfingsten Road, Northbrook, IL. On December 2, 1972, the BACA Building Committee, decided to form a new corporation, the Islamic Cultural Center of Greater Chicago, Inc., abbreviated ICC. The ICC was incorporated on December 26, 1972. Imam Kamil was elected as its first president.


BACA has continued its activities both as a separate corporation and in partnership with its offspring, the ICC. To give assurances to the non-Bosnian Muslims, BACA entered into the TRUST (WAQF) AGREEMENT with the ICC, dated March 1, 1975, retaining the beneficial ownership and power to control the trust but granting the ICC the right to manage said trust property providing that it would be managed by a nine member Board of Directors, four to be elected by BACA, four to be elected by ICC and the ninth member to be selected from the Turkish community. The first phase of the ICC, consisting of educational, social and administrative sections, with a custodian's apartment, was completed at the cost of about $650,000, and opening ceremonies were held on March 21, 1976. Shortly after the completion of the first phase, Imam Kamil resigned as the president of the ICC and was appointed by the ICC Board of Directors as Administrative Director and Imam of the ICC. On April 2, 1977, the new ICC By-laws, which incorporated the required portions of the Trust (WAQF) Agreement, were approved by the ICC members. The founder and the great leader Imam Kamil Avdich passed away on December 2, 1979. Imam Kamil departed from this temporary dwelling to a better abode in which Almighty God will richly reward him. He was missed very much by the BACA and ICC members. One of the requirements of the Trust Agreement was that an ICC Imam shall be proficient in the Arabic, Bosnian and English languages.

After a search, Mustafa Ceric from Bosnia, a graduate from Al-Azhar University, was selected as the new Imam. He arrived in May 1981 from Bosnia and was appointed by the ICC Board as the full time ICC Imam. Dr. Mustafa Ceric received his Ph.D. in Islamic Studies from the University of Chicago in 1986. After very successfully serving BACA and ICC for over five years, he returned to Bosnia where he became a great religious leader of Bosnian Muslims during the 1992-1995 war and aggression on Bosnia and was elected as their spiritual head with the title of Reisu-l-ulema of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The second phase of the ICC was completed with a prayer hall, minaret and a lecture hall, at the cost of about $800,000. The opening was held on October 15, 1988. Both BACA and ICC, experienced some internal problems in the period from 1988 until 1991, but they overcame them and came out stronger and more united. The BACA and ICC Board of Directors have learned to cooperate with each other very closely as is required by the Trust (Waqf) Agreement.


Prior to the aggression on Bosnia and Herzegovina, only several hundred Bosnians resided in the Chicago Metropolitan area and perhaps just as many in the rest of the USA. After the war and terrible aggression was unleashed on Bosnia and Herzegovina by its neighbors, BACA mobilized all available resources to help Bosnians in Bosnia to survive the aggression and genocide. BACA organized, collected and forwarded humanitarian aid to Bosnia and Herzegovina, mostly food, clothing, medicine and medical supplies in nineteen containers. Sixteen of these containers were 40 feet long and 8 feet in diameter.



The value of BACA humanitarian aid and cash sent to Bosnia and Herzegovina exceeded $2,000.000 for the period from 1992 through 1995. During the last decade of the 20-th century, the Chicago area experienced a great influx of Bosnian refugees, estimated to exceed 30,000 (with over 200,000 in the USA), who were mostly expelled by their Serbian and Croatian neighbors. As a result, both BACA and ICC, have received substantial increases in their respective memberships. Consequently, the existing building and parking lot areas have become inadequate to accommodate these increases. There is an apparent need to acquire one or more additional buildings for the religious, cultural and social needs of the increasing number of Bosnian refugees in the Chicago area. BACA shall always promote the interests of all Bosniacs and shall continue to help them to preserve their religion and traditions. BACA shall continue, inshallah, to work hard for the benefits of all Muslims and all Americans.
BT


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http://www.islamonline.net/livedialogue/english/Guestcv.asp?hGuestID=z3o6bY

Biography of Mustafa Ceric


DATE OF BIRTH: February 5, 1952
PLACE OF BIRTH: Visoko, Bosnia
MARITAL STATUS: Married, with three children

LANGUAGES:
Bosnian, Arabic, English
Knowledge of Turkish, German and French

EDUCATION:

· Comprehensive School in Veliko Cajno, Visoko, Bosnia-Herzegovina (Grammar School)
· Gazi Husrevbegova Medresa of Sarajevo, 1974 (Islamic High School)
· University of Azhar, Cairo (Faculty of Arabic Language and Literature) Graduation, 1978 (B.M.)
· University of Chicago, Ph. D., June 1987. Dissertation: A Study of the Theology of Abu Mansur al-Maturidi (ca. 235/850-333/944). Mentor Fazlur Rahman.

WORK EXPERIENCE:

· Imam
Islamic Cultural Center, Northbrook, Chicago, 1981
· Lecturer
American Islamic College, Chicago, 1985
· Grand Imam
Islamic Center of Zagreb, 1986
· Lecturer
Faculty of Islamic Theology, Sarajevo, 1987
· Editor
Islamic Symposium of Islamic Center of Zagreb, 1988
· Associate Professor
International Institute of Islamic Thought and Civilization, Kuala Lumpur, 1991
· Full Professor
International Institute of Islamic Thought and Civilization, Kuala Lumpur, 1992
· Raisu-l-ulama (The Supreme Head)
of the Islamic Community in Bosnia-Herzegovina (the Highest Post for Islamic Affairs); Elected on April 28, 1993

PUBLICATIONS IN ENGLISH:

· Roots of Synthetic Theology in Islam: A Study of the Theology of Abu Mansur al-Maturidi (ca. 235/850-333/944), ISTAC, KUALA LUMPUR, 1995
· "A Choice Between War and Peace", New Sunday Times, January 5, 1992, Kuala Lumpur

PUBLICATIONS IN BOSNIAN:

· "Ljudsko pona?anje izme?u teorije i prakse" (Human Behavior in Theory and Practice), Preporod, 1987
· "El-Maturidi, zivot i djelo" (al-Maturidi: Life and Works), Glasnik, 1987
· "Islamska teologija" (Islamic Theology) Opca enciklopedija Jugoslovenskog leksikografskog zavoda >Miroslav Krleza< -Dopunsko izdanje A-Z, Zagreb, 1988
· "Prenetalna medicina i humana genetika" (Prenatal Medicine And Human Genetics), Preporod, 1988
· "Medicina i islam" (Medicine and Islam), Preporod, 1988
· "Islamski koncept zivota" (Islamic Concept of Life), Preporod, 1988
· "Ljudski zivot" (Human Life), Preporod, 1988
· "Kontracepcija, sterilizacija i abortus" (Contraception, Sterilization and Aborts), Preporod, 1988
· "Refleksije o porijeklu i razvoju sufizma" (Reflections on the Origin and Development of Sufism), Zbornik radova prvog simpozija Zagrebacke dzamije 1408/1988, Published 1989
· "Zivot, zdravlje i bolest nerodenog djeteta" (Islamski stav) (Life, Health and Disease of Unborn Child (Islamic View)), Anali, Opca bolnica >Dr. Josip Kalfe?<<, Zagreb, 1989
· "Suvremena duhovna kretanja u islamskom svijetu" (Contemporary Spiritual Movements in Islamic World) Zbornik radova drugog simpozija Zagrebacke dzamije 1409/1989, Published 1990
· "Ebu Mensur el-Maturidi: glavna djela o fikhu, tefsiru i kelamu" (Abu Mansur al Maturidi: Main Works on Fiqh, Tafsir and Kalam), Zbornik radova 3, Islamski teolo?ki fakultet u Sarajevu, 1990
· "Autoritet u Islamu" (Authority in Islam), Preporod, 1990
· "Islam izme?u religije i nacije" (Islam Between Religion and Nationality), Glasnik, 1991

INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCES
AND LECTURES:

· "Palestine and Justice: the Next Phase", Forth Annual Commemoration for the Victims of the Sabra-Shatila Massacres, September 16-18, 1982; Palestine Human Rights Campaign: National Conference, Chicago, September 19-20, 1986,
· "International Educational Conference on Muslim educational System: Goals and Orientation", Aligarh Muslim University Alumni Association of Greater Chicago and Muslim Community Center, Chicago, October 22, 1988.
· "Current Issues in the Islamic World", Wabash College Religion Department, Crawfordsville, Indianapolis, March 27, 1990
· "Muslim Unity in the unity of Islamic Belief of Tawhid", al-Durus al-Hasaniyyah Held During the Month of Ramadan at the Palace and in the Presence of His Majesty King Hasan II, the King of Marocco, Ramadan, 1411/1991
· "Muslims in Yugoslavia: Present and Future", King Faisal Center for Islamic Research and Studies, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, March 16, 1992
· "Islamic is mercy (Rahmah) to Mankind", The 2nd International Seminar on al-Qur'an at Dewan Muktamar, Pusat Islam Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur, February 27-28, 1992
· The Millennium World Peace Summit of Religious and Spiritual Leaders, United Nations, New York, August 28, 2000
· World Economic Forum, Davos, Switzerland, 28-31 January 2001

DIPLOMATIC ACTIVITIES:

· A member of the Bosnian official presidential delegation to Saudi Arabia that held talks with His Majesty King Fahd ibn Abdul Aziz in March, 1992
· A member of the Bosnian official presidential delegation to the Islamic Republic of Iran that held talks with his Excellency President Rafsanjani in October, 1992
· Special Representative of the President of the Republic of Bosnia-Herzegovina Mr. Alija Izetbegovic in Malaysia, in 1992
· Official Representative of the Government of the Republic of Bosnia-Herzegovina, in Malaysia, from May 13, 1992
· As the Supreme Head have represented the Islamic Community and Muslims of Bosnia-Herzegovina all over the world, since 1993

MEMBERSHIPS:

· European Council for Fatwa and Research, Dublin;
· Board of Trustees, International Islamic University, Islamabad;
· Inter-religious Council of Bosnia- Herzegovina, Sarajevo;
· Executive Board of the Foundation for Srebrenica/Potocari Memorial and Cemetery, Sarajevo
· Honorary President of the WCRP International, New York
· Comoderator of the WCRP European Religious Leaders Council, Paris

-------------------------

MIM: The humanitarian aid which was being sent to Bosnia in the 1990's often went to help the Mujahadeen. Many of the Bosnian 'charity' organisations were actually funding fronts for Al Qaeda.

This biography of the Bosnian president Izetbekovic was written by former CAIR communications director Ismail Royer. Royer is currently in prison after being convicted of planning to wage Jihad against the United States. In the 1990's Royer had went to Bosnia where joined the Jihad against Americans and Europeans. I views was the website started by Royer.

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http://www.youngmuslimscanada.org/biographies/display.asp?ID=2

Alija Izetbegovic

Copyright: http://www.iviews.com
Published Wednesday June 14, 2000

By Ismail Royer

"Our goal: the Islamization of Muslims. Our methods: to believe and to struggle."—Alija Izetbegovic, "Islamic Declaration," 1970

"O' Alija, O' honored! You drive America crazy!" –Line from Arabic poetry sung by foreign mujahideen during Bosnian war

Last week, Alija Izetbegovic announced his decision to step down as president of Bosnia. The man Bosnians affectionately call "Deedo," or Grandpa, will leave office in October. In a speech announcing his resignation, Izetbegovic cited health problems as the main reason for his decision—but tellingly, he added, "The international community is pushing things forward in Bosnia...but it is doing it at expense of the Muslim people. I feel it as an injustice," he said. "These are the things that I cannot live with."

Izetbegovic's resignation is an event upon which Muslims around the world should reflect. He is one of the few Muslim political leaders of our time who demonstrates real love for Islam, and his career contains lessons in the way the West views Muslims in Europe and deals with Islamic movements in power.

"Do we want the Muslim people to leave their going-around-in-circles, their dependence, backwardness, and poverty?" Izetbegovic once wrote, "Then we show clearly which path will take us to that goal: establishing Islam in every field in the personal life of the individual, in family and society…and the establishment of a unique Islamic community from Morocco to Indonesia."

For Izetbegovic, these were not just words; they were a plan of action that he acted upon his entire life.

In 1940, at the age of 16 he co-founded the Young Muslims, a religious and political group modeled on Egypt's Ikhwan al-Muslimeen. Six years later he and his friend Nedzib Sacirbey were jailed by the communist government of Yugoslavia for helping publish the journal "Mujahid." After their release, the Communists again cracked down on the young Muslims and in 1949 sentenced four members to death and jailed many more for their Islamic activism. In 1983 Izetbegovic was arrested again for disseminating "Islamic propaganda" and sentenced to 14 years in prison and was released in 1988.

It would seem unthinkable that such a man would ever become president of a European country. But in 1990, Izetbegovic was elected president of Bosnia and Herzegovina on the eve of that country's descent into a David-and-Goliath war with Yugoslavia and Croatia. Instead of packing up his family and fleeing his country as it was overrun, as the leaders of one Persian Gulf nation recently did, he stayed to lead his people throughout the war from his sandbagged office and his modest apartment. In doing so, he became for the world the face of the Bosnian people's struggle for survival in the face of genocide.

Izetbegovic led an army that managed to beat back vastly superior Croatian and Serbian forces. But he leaves another crucial legacy: for Bosnians, he took the shame out of being a Muslim. In Yugoslavia, regular visits to the mosque meant being snubbed for jobs in the Communist Party-controlled economy. Islam was demonized in history books, and practicing Muslim students could expect vastly lower grades regardless of how much they studied. Even the Arabic and Turkish words and expressions that enrich the Bosnian language were systematically removed and derided as "uncultured."

But "Alija Izetbegovic succeeded in organizing Muslims as a nation in Bosnia," Dr. Zuhdija Adilovic, a professor at the Islamic Pedagogic Academy in Zenica, told iviews.com in an interview. "This was the first time that Muslims had come to power in Bosnia."

With that power, the president embarked on a policy of reaffirmation of Bosnians' cultural identity. Today, children study their religion in public schools. Government employees, businessmen, soldiers, and university students can openly practice Islam with a sense of dignity. A worshipper in one of Sarajevo's packed mosques today might find a street sweeper praying on his left side and the city's mayor praying on his right.

Izetbegovic's unapologetic approach to his religion and his political power made the West uneasy. Amid warnings of a "fundamentalists Islamic state" in Europe, America and the EU stood by for three years facilitating the genocide of the Bosnian Muslim people. In 1995, when Islamic brigades of the Bosnian army launched a massive assault on Serb forces and seized thirty percent of Serb-controlled territory in a few days, it dawned on the West that Muslims might actually be victorious. America and Europe suddenly demanded peace.

A "peace plan" drawn up and imposed by the United States and enforced by NATO military occupation rewarded Serbs with their own state on half of Bosnia's territory, while Croats received another twenty-five percent. The US plan left Muslims, which make up approximately half of Bosnia's population, quarantined and landlocked on one quarter of their country.

The US peace plan imposed a system of government on Bosnia that guarantees perpetual economic and political stagnation and weakens Muslim political power. Serbs, Muslims, and Croats each have an equal voice in a three-member "presidency" in Bosnia, even though Muslims make up the majority of the population. If the country were a "real" democracy, with each citizen having an equal voice, Bosnia would be virtually guaranteed Muslim leadership by virtue of demographic. And under the current system, the government only takes action by consensus. With Serbs and Croats determined to undermine Muslims at every step, consensus never occurs, and in practice, the real power in Bosnia is wielded by the European Union.

Iviews.com asked Nedzib Sacirbey, Bosnia's ambassador-at-large and Izetbegovic's friend and cellmate from his youth, what Izetbegovic meant when he said, "the international community is pushing things forward in Bosnia...at expense of the Muslim people."

"The number one obstacle is that the international community did not use its power to return refugees, which would create a multi-ethnic society," Sacirbey said. "And for example, in Banja Luka, the Serbs leveled all mosques, but now 5 years after the war, there is still no permission to build one single mosque. It is the same in Croatian part."

The European Union's failure to return Muslim refugees to their homes in occupied areas of Bosnia enforces the war's ethnic cleansing. Meanwhile, for the most part, Serbs and Croats travel to and live in Muslim areas freely. On a recent trip to Mostar, a city divided in half with Muslim and Croat areas, iviews.com spoke to residents on both sides of the fault-line. Asked whether she would feel afraid to travel to the Muslim side, a Croat woman said, "No, I go there all the time to shop and visit my daughter." On the other hand, several Croats said they did not want Muslims on their side, and many Muslims said they faced harassment and threats of violence whenever they crossed the river separating the two communities.

The United States and the EU do, however, use their power to actively undermine Izetbegovic and his Party for Democratic Action (SDA) and to promote the former Communist Party of Bosnia, which was renamed the Social Democrat Party (SDP). Fed up with a lack of economic progress, a large number of Bosnian Muslim voters shifted support to the neo-communists in the most recent elections. The fact that the US State Department provided SDP with crucial logistic support for its campaigns didn't hurt either.

At the same time, Wolfgang Petritsch, the head of the European Union's civil authority in Bosnia, urged voters to dump "the leaders from the war," of which Izetbegovic is the only one remaining. And the EU ran advertisements on the television network it operates urging viewers to vote for "change"—in other words, change the leadership of the communist opposition.

With characteristic doublespeak, the, US State Department describes the result of its efforts as a victory for "political pluralism…at the expense of the ruling national parties." Sacirbey, as would most rational observers, calls it interference in the democratic process. "We expect them to say, 'Use your voting rights, vote for the best candidate,' not, 'Vote for or against so and so'," said Sacirbey.

Muslims have plenty to worry about with regard to the SDP. At an outdoor rally in Tuzla two months ago, SDP members feasted on barbecued pork chops to demonstrate their "secularism." They have announced their intention to rename the main road in the Muslim stronghold of Zenica, after Yugoslavia's communist dictator. Additionally, a group of party activists reportedly hurled stones at a mosque recently.

So many of the problems of the Islamic world that we typically blame on others are fundamentally the fault of Muslims, but not so in Bosnia. In the face of this internationally organized quagmire designed to paralyze and underdevelop Muslim progress in Bosnia, Alija Izetbegovic decided he didn't have the strength to continue. "Somebody must come who can deal with such problems," he said.

The tragedy of Bosnia is not only that 350,000 men, women, and children died because their neighbors hated them for their religion, or that thousands of women were raped, or that hundreds of mosques were razed. What does it say about our civilization, that politicians in Europe and America had the power to intervene, but chose not to? It suggests not only that for the West, the lives of Muslims are not worth the trouble. The failure to stop the ethnic cleansing of Bosnian Muslims, along with the behavior of the West in post-war Bosnia, suggests that genocide will be tolerated for the sake of a political goal; in this case, the prevention of a European Muslim state. The lesson for Muslims deluded by our era's lofty talk of "democracy" is that for America and Europe, the stated goal of "promoting democracy" will be overridden by their pathological fear of Islam.

But in the face of the tragedy of genocide and betrayal by the West, Izetbegovic triumphed. He led Bosnia to freedom from Yugoslavia as an independent, sovereign state. He raised an army to defend his people. He led the renaissance of Islam in Bosnia, while protecting the rights of Christians in the areas under his control. For this, we should thank him, and wish him well.

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Dr Darko Trifunovic - Bosnian terrorist trained for Mumbai attack

Mumbai suspect 'trained Bosnia fighters'

From correspondents in Banja Luka, Bosnia-Hercegovina

December 12, 2008 05:22am

A LEADER of Lashkar-e-Taiba, suspected in the Mumbai attacks, took part in the training of Islamic fighters and police in Bosnia in the 1990s, a terrorist expert said today.

"Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi participated in Bosnia's war," Dzevad Galijasevic, an independent expert, said, referring to the leader who has been detained by Pakistan.

"He was a commander of the Pakistani section of the (Bosnian army) El-Mujahed unit" notorious for criminal activities, Mr Galijasevic said, adding he had obtained the information from "various official sources".

"Lakhvi was in Bosnia in 1994 and immediately after the war in 1996 and 1997 when he took part in the training of police forces in central Bosnia.

"It was official training so evidence about it can be found in police archives," he said.

Police declined to immediately comment on Mr Galijasevic's allegations.

Pakistan confirmed yesterday it had arrested Lakhvi and another suspected leader of the group, Zarar Shah.

The two men have both been named by Indian media as key planners of the devastating attacks in Mumbai in which 172 people died.

Hundreds of fighters from Islamic countries joined the mainly Bosnian Muslim army during the 1992-1995 war.

Under a peace deal, they were ordered to leave, but some stayed on after obtaining Bosnian citizenship, mainly by marrying local women.

Mr Galijasevic could not say whether Lakhvi also obtained a Bosnian passport.

Bosnia came under the spotlight after the September 11, 2001 attacks in the United States due to the presence of ex-Islamic fighters, locally known as mujahedeens.

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Dr Darko Trifunovic - Bosnia: Al Qaeda

Al-Qaeda Smuggling Weapons Via Croatia
Al-Qaeda is smuggling weapons from Bosnia through Croatia’s capital Zagreb, Gunja and Split.
Author
Hina
Translation
Translation
Lajla Mlinaric
TEXT

Members and sympathisers of Al-Qaeda and radical Wahhabi Muslims from Bosnia-Herzegovina have been smuggling large amounts of weapons and explosives into Croatia in the past several months with the aim of using them for terrorist attacks in Europe, Bosnian Banja Luka’s Nezavisne novine daily reported on Wednesday.

Citing intelligence agencies in Bosnia, the paper writes that members and sympathisers of Al-Qaeda and Wahhabi were “taking advantage of the current political situation and engagement of Bosnian authorities with reforms so they could transfer a large amount of weaponry and explosive devices from Bosnia to the Croatian territory”.

The leaders of the said terrorist organisations are relying on Croatia being admitted into the EU in the near future, creating favourable conditions for weaponry and explosives to be distributed across Europe from Croatia for the purpose of terrorist attacks because the borders towards the EU will be open, the daily writes.

There is information that the weaponry is being transferred into Zagreb, Karlovac, Gunja and Split, says the paper, quoting an intelligence officer who requested to remain anonymous.

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Dr Darko Trifunovic - Bosnia: Former Muslim President War Criminal Alija Izetbegovic was paid by Al Qaeda

Bosnia: Former Muslim President Was Paid By Al Qaeda

IzetbegovicWhen Alija Izetbegovic (pictured) died and was buried on the 22nd October 2003, only hours before the funeral the United Nations war crimes tribunal in the Hague had confirmed that he had been under investigation.

Izetbegovic had governed Bosnia-Hercegovina as President from 1990 onwards, and had seen the start of the civil war begin under his rule in 1992. He signed the Clinton-brokered Dayton Agreement in 1995 which effectively ended the conflict. He continued as vice president until 2000. Though he had a knack of persuading Western leaders that he was a benign character, the reality seems far removed from the image of a benevolent Muslim "grandfather".

Today, AKI reports that a Sarajevo-based weekly newspaper, Slobodna Bosna (Free Bosnia) has stated that Izetbegovic received money from the Saudi businessman Yassin al-Khadi (Yassin al Qadi). On October 12, 2001, Yassin al-Kadi was listed by the US government as a specially designated global terrorist for his support of al-Qaeda.

Al-Kadi's assets in Bosnia-Hercegovina were frozen in October 2001, at the request of the nation's Banking Agency. He had shares in the Vakufska Bank but these too were frozen, on the advice of the US.

In 1996, the report from Slobodna Bosna alleges, Izetbegovic received $195,000. The information on this transaction came from a British bank while al-Kadi's charity Mufavak was being investigated. In 2002 this charity was banned, but began operating again in Bosnia under the name "Blessed Relief". Mufavak had gathered $15 to 20 million from various sources, and at least $3 million had gone to Al Qaeda.

But the claims of Al Qaeda and Islamist involvement on the part of Izetbegovic go much deeper. In 1992, he invited in the Mujahideen from Saudi Arabia, who went on a spree of murder and decapitation. The government is now trying to revoke the citizenships of 1,500 of these, as was reported by AKI this week.

In 1970, Izetbegovic wrote "The Islamic Declaration: A Program for the Islamization of Muslims and the Muslim Peoples", which was disseminated clandestinely amongst Muslims, but was not officially published until 1990 when the communist system which had been led by Tito collapsed.

This document has been used by his opponents to validate their claims that he was at heart an Islamist. The invitation of the Mujahideen (shown below, marching through Zenica) to add jihadism to the volatile ethnic situation escalated the strong feelings in the region. According to Pogledi: "The mujahedin were "incorporated and subordinated" within the structure of the 7th Muslim Brigade when it was formed on November 19, 1992 . On August 13, 1993, the mujahedeen were organized in the "El Mujahed" unit. The Bosnian Muslim military command put this unit in the 3rd Corps area of operations and subordinated it to the command of that Corps."

BosniaJihadi.jpg

But the claims of Al Qaeda involvement go directly to Izetbegovic's door. Terrorism expert Evan Kohlmann wrote a book, Al Qaeda in Europe: The Afghan-Bosnian Network, in which he details the involvement of Saudi Mujahideen in Bosnia and the rise of Al Qaeda.

Robert Spencer in JihadWatch quotes from this book:

Using the Bosnian war as their cover, Afghan-trained Islamic militants loyal to Osama bin Laden convened in the Balkans in 1992 to establish a European domestic terrorist infrastructure in order to plot their violent strikes against the United States. As the West and the United Nations looked on with disapproval, the fanatic foreign 'mujahideen', or holy warriors, wreaked havoc across southern Europe, taking particular aim at UN peacekeepers and even openly fighting with Bosnian Muslims at times. Middle Eastern religious and charitable organizations, largely based in and funded from the Arabian Gulf, were responsible for bankrolling this effort, and providing travel documentation for would-be mujahideen recruits.... many of the cell members - responsible for some of the most notorious terrorist attacks of the past decade - spent their formative years waging jihad in the unlikely Muslim land of Bosnia."
Slobodan Milosevic is widely regarded as a Serbian monster, but while he was on trial in the Hague, a British journalist Eve-Ann Prentice was giving evidence. She told the court in February that she had been scheduled to meet Alija Izetbegovic in November 1994. She said that while she and a journalist from Der Spiegel waited in a foyer for their interviews with the Bosnian leader, they saw Osama bin Laden being escorted into Izetbegovic's office. Judge Robinson cut short her testimony and declared it "irrelevant".

A damning critique of Izetbegovic and his Al Qaeda connections, written from a Serbian perspective, can be found in Serbianna, and more can be found in an article from the Toronto-based Centre for Peace in the Balkans. A highly critical biography of Izetbegovic, by Vojin Joksimovich, can be found HERE.

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Dr Darko Trifunovic - Bosnia: Terrorism's Logistical Base

BOSNIA: TERRORISM’S LOGISTICAL BASE
Defense & Foreign Affairs Strategic Policy, October  2004 [Terrorism – Staff report]

Saudis and Iranians Work Together Through a Bosnian Terrorist Group to Support the Conflict in Chechnya

INFORMATION OBTAINED BY Defense & Foreign Affairs from a secret Wahabbi terrorist organization based in Bosnia shows how the Saudi and Iranian governments are working together to support combat operations against the Russian Government in Chechnya, and are building a base of future operations in Turkish-occupied Northern Cyprus. Moreover, during 2004 the organization they support has expanded dramatically in terms of operations and funding, and has opened a string of new offices and facilities around Bosnia and into Southern Serbia’s Raška (Sandzhak) Muslim area.

The organization, Kvadrat (Quadrant), a nominally Sunni Wahabbi order, whose members practice “Islam from the roots,” was founded in Sarajevo in 1995 and uses as its cadres children orphaned during the Bosnia-Herzegovina civil war, indoctrinating and training them in the Wahabbist ideology and in terrorist and guerilla warfare tactics.

Kvadrat sends its trained personnel through the “green transversal”- the Islamist and narco-trafficking safe-haven line - from Bosnia and, through Turkey and Georgia, to Chechnya, where they join al-Qaida-supported Chechen Islamist terrorist and guerilla operations against the Russian Government and the local population.

Significantly, the Iranian Government has denied that it supports the Chechen Islamist separatists, a public stance which has enabled Iran to trade with Russia, and, particularly, to acquire Russian advanced military systems. Faced with virtual isolation from sources of supply of main weapons systems - it can still obtain some missile and rocket systems from the People’s Republic of China (PRC) and North Korea (DPRK) - and essential political isolation, the clerical Iranian leadership publicly abandoned the Chechen cause, which they had ignited following the end of the Cold War, and proclaimed support for the Russian Government position on Chechnya.

In fact, support for the Chechen Islamists has continued to flow unabated from Afghanistan, through Iran and (with bribery) Azerbaijan, into Chechnya.

However, the now-clear involvement of Iranian VEVAK (Ministry of Intelligence and Security [MOIS] Vezarat-e Ettela’at va Amniat-e Keshvar) intelligence officers in training the youth of Kvadrat, supported by Saudi Government funding and officials, shows how both the Iranian clerics and Saudi Arabia have been working together on the common Islamist mission, despite Iranian claims of friendship with Russia, and despite Saudi Government claims that it is combating Islamist terrorism and, in particular, al-Qaida. Bosnian sources told Defense & Foreign Affairs that Kvadrat was, to all intents, an al-Qaida-linked organization, given that its members use the al-Qaida “pipeline” and fight with al-Qaida forces in Chechnya.

Sources close to Kvadrat indicate that the group’s members frequently engage in verbal fights with other Muslim religious leaders and are highly critical of other Islamic leaders for not going down the right path. One source noted: “The young Kvadrat members have been brainwashed for a decade; since they were little children in most cases. They have been taught to believe that only their zealous approach to Islam is correct; they are fanatical.”

Kvadrat now operates mainly in the triangle area between Zenica, Tuzla and Sarajevo, in Bosnia-Herzegovina. Pezo Adnan is believed still to be the operational leader of the group, although he “takes his orders” from a leader in Vienna, Austria. Adnan lives in Zenica. and his bodyguard and driver is a known mujahedin, referred to by his nom de guerre, “A?it,” who came to Bosnia through Zagreb in 1993. “A?it” was a member of the el-Mujahid terrorist unit in Bosnia from October 20, 1993. El-Mujahid, during Operation Hurricane 95 in 1995, operated as part of the structure of the Bosnian Muslim Army and, as a unit, participated in major war crimes - including beheadings and mass murders of prisoners - against Serb civilians and military personnel in Ozren and Vozuca.[Rasim Deli?, wartime commander of the Republic of Bosnia Herzegovina (RBiH) Army, essentially the Bosnian Muslim force, ordered the formation of the el-Mujahid unit, made up of foreign citizens, on August 13, 1993, in the area of responsibility of the RBiH Army Third Corps. The order was based on a decision by the RBiH Presidency, led by Alija Izetbegovi?, which confirms that the BiH leadership was behind the formation of el-Mujahid. “A?it” was one of the foreign recruits who came into the organization at the beginning; his national origin is not known at this time.]

“A?it” has been known, from surveillance, to be in permanent contact with Abu el-Mali, one of the el-Mujahid leaders, often referred to as the “emir,” a title usually given only to core Islamist leaders, such as Hasan Cengic.

Kvadrat has since 2001 been training orphan boys on Jablanickom Lake in the small village of Podi, in Bosnia. The main trainer for indoctrination is ?engi? Faruku from Sarajevo, but VEVAK officers conduct the training in terrorism and guerilla warfare. Indeed, one of the main activities of the organization in 2004, together with Iranian VEVAK instructors, has been to provide military support and Islamic fighters from Bosnia for operations in Chechnya. Žulum Almir, a Kvadrat member, was killed in Chechnya. Some members of Kvadrat were arrested in Turkey, en route to Chechnya; one such example was Bijedi? Kenan, who was arrested in Turkey in 2001.

Kvadrat gets funding from the seemingly-innocent High Saudi Committee for Children Without Parental Care (VSK) based in the King Fahd Cultural Center, in Sarajevo, Bosnia, and led by Sheikh Nasser al-Saeed (whose deputy is Abdul-Rahman al-Rashed, supported by Khalid al-Aqueli, who also has a Bosnian passport). VSK’s offices in Bosnia have, in the past, been raided by NATO Stabilization Force (SFOR) personnel over issues related to the support of terrorism. VSK cars are often identified at Kvadrat establishments, particularly at the facility at Jablanickom Lake (but also near other Kvadrat training facilities), and VSK officials and offices have repeatedly hosted known radical Islamists. VSK employee Saber Lahmer was, in fact, arrested by Bosnian Federal authorities for connections to terrorism.

Kvadrat also receives support from Al-Haramain charities - the Al-Haramain & Al-Masjed A1-Aqsa Charity Foundation - a Riyadh, Saudi Arabia-based organization which was declared on September 9, 2004, by the US Treasury Department to be a terrorist-related organization. (1) Significantly, Al-Haramain was specifically linked by the US Government to the support of terrorist operations in Chechnya, as well as al-Qaida operations against the two US embassies bombed in Nairobi and Dar es-Salaam in 1998.

Kvadrat officials have also been in close touch with Sheikh Imad, who was arrested by local authorities in Bosnia for links to al-Qaida.

Significantly, however, the main control or direction of Kvadrat comes from Vienna, Austria: businessman Mohammed Por?a, a Bosnian Muslim, appears to be providing strategic guidance and orders to Kvadrat. Por?a apparently also has links with other Islamist organizations in Austria and Germany, and is also involved in fundraising for Kvadrat. Clearly, following its formation in 1995, Kvadrat has had a number of financing sources, including fundraising in the international Muslim community. This has been conducted in part through Al-Haramain, but also through other channels open to Mr Por?a.Kvadrat in 2004 has been opening offices around Bosnia and in the southern Serbian region of Raška, which is adjacent to Bosnia’s Gorazde Corridor, which links the Muslim area of Bosnia with Serbia. Kvadrat’s involvement in extending its offices down into the Raška area indicates that it may now be officially linked into funding from narco-trafficking, the logistical lines for which, in Europe, include movement of narcotics from the East (ie: Afghanistan through Iran, Azerbaijan into Russia, or through Iran and Turkey) eventually into Albania and then through Kosovo and Raška areas of Serbia, into Bosnia and thence into Western Europe.

The main activist radicals in Kvadrat were identified by Defense & Foreign Affairs sources as: Softi? Samir, Suša Samir, Kolši? Nisvet, and Dzafi? Emir (born 1975; considered President of Kvadrat in Visoko city).

Defense & Foreign Affairs sources said that some Kvadrat fighters have been moving to Turkish-occupied Northern Cyprus after Chechen actions. Essentially, the sources report, Kvadrat has used Northern Cyprus as a safe-haven for some of its more active fighters, allowing them a discreet place to blend back into civil society before returning to Bosnia. However, it was understood that Kvadrat was also building a base in Northern Cyprus, to proselytize the Muslim community there with a view to longer-term domination of Cypriot society.

The Steering Committee of Kvadrat, has, since 1999, included:
Mezit Nermin (“Nerko”), from Sarajevo;
Seknic Sendad, from Mostar;
Sinanovic… Kermal, from Sarajevo;
Tahic… Berin, from Sarajevo;
Alic Galib, from Sarajevo;
Motoruga Elvir from Sarajevo;
Hodzic… Emir, from Sarajevo;
Cukic… Sabahudin, from Sarajevo;
Cengic… Faruk, from Sarajevo;
Hasanovic… Aliya, from Sarajevo;
Ahmetovic… Amir, from Kaknja;
Nuhanovid… Sanel, from Biha…
Ortas Emire, from the Pale suburb of Sarajevo.

But in 2004 it was noted that membership of Kvadrat was dramatically enlarged, and the Steering Committee was also enlarged by additional members:
[surnames first]
Cardakovic Seco, Dedovic Edin, Gusic Elmedin (“Medo”), Skrijelj Admir.

What is significant is that the Office of the High Representative (OHR), the internationally-appointed governor of Bosnia-Herzegovina, has continued to maintain that terrorist organizations, or terrorist support organizations, did not exist in Bosnia. The OHR, former British politician Paddy Ashdown, a former British Intelligence (M16) official, has, instead, focused on supporting Islamist agendas in Bosnia and has - by attempting to only pursue alleged war criminals from the Serbian side of the Bosnian civil war - actively facilitated the activities of such organizations as Kvadrat.

Footnote: Al Haramain
1. On September 9, 2004, the US Treasury Department issued a statement (JS-1895), entitled US-Based Branch of Al Haramain Foundation Linked to Terror; Treasury Designates US Branch, Director. That statement noted:

The Treasury Department announced today the designation [as a terrorist-linked organization] of the US branch of the Saudi Arabia-based Al-Haramain Islamic Foundation (AHF), along with one of its directors, Suliman Al-Buthe [an Egyptian by birth]. In addition, the AHF branch located in the Union of the Comoros was also designated today.

“We continue to use all relevant powers of the US Government to pursue and identify the channels of terrorist financing, such as corrupted charities, at home and abroad. Al-Haramain has been used around the world to underwrite terror, therefore we have taken this action to excommunicate these two branches and Suliman Al-Buthe from the worldwide financial community,” said Stuart Levey, Treasury’s Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence.

The assets of the US AHF branch, which is headquartered in Oregon, were blocked pending investigation on February 19, 2004. On the previous day, a Federal search warrant was executed against all property purchased on behalf of the US AHF branch. The investigation involved agents from the Internal Revenue Service - Criminal Investigations (IRS-CI), the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Department of Homeland Security’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

The US-based branch of AHF was formally established in 1997. Documents naming Al-Buthe as the organization’s attorney and providing him with broad legal authority were signed by Aqeel Abdul Aziz Al-Aqil, the former director of AHF. Aqil has been designated by the US and the UN 1267 Sanctions Committee because of AHF’s support for al-Qaida while under his oversight.

The investigation shows direct links between the US branch and Osama bin Laden. In addition, the affidavit alleges the US branch of AHF criminally violated tax laws and engaged in other money laundering offenses. … [I]ndividuals associated with the branch tried to conceal the movement of funds intended for Chechnya by omitting them from tax returns and mischaracterizing their use, which they claimed was for the purchase of a prayer house in Springfield, Missouri.

Other information available to the US shows that funds that were donated to AHF with the intention of supporting Chechen refugees were diverted to support mujahedin, as well as Chechen leaders affiliated with al-Qaida.

AHF has operations throughout the Union of the Comoros, and information shows that two associates of AHF Comoros are linked to al-Qaida. According to the transcript from US v. Bin Laden, the Union of the Comoros was used as a staging area and exfiltration route for the perpetrators of the 1998 bombings of the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. The AHF branches in Kenya and Tanzania have been previously designated for providing financial and other operational support to these terrorist attacks.

Since March 2002, the United States and Saudi Arabia have jointly designated eleven branches of AHF based on evidence of financial, material and/or logistical support to the al-Qaida network and affiliated organizations. These branches, Afghanistan, Albania, Bangladesh, Bosnia, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Kenya, the Netherlands, Pakistan, Somalia, and Tanzania, along with the former director of AHF, Aqeel Abdul Aziz Al-Aqil, are named on the UN’s 1267 Committee’s consolidated list of terrorists associated with al-Qaida, Osama bin Laden and the Taliban and are subject to international sanctions.

In June of 2004, the Saudi Government announced that it was dissolving AHF and other Saudi charities and committees operating abroad and folding their assets into a newly created entity, the Saudi National Commission for Relief and Charity Work Abroad. According to the Saudi Embassy, the Commission, a non-governmental body, will take over all aspects of private overseas aid operations and assume responsibility for the distribution of private charitable donations from Saudi Arabia.

The US State Dept. on June 2, 2004, noted:
The United States is designating today, June 2 [2004], five branches of the Al-Haramain Foundation as well as the organization’s former leader, Aqeel Abdul Aziz Al-Aqil, as terrorist financers, based on evidence of their links to al-Qaida. These designations are part of our ongoing effort to cut off terrorist funding and to ensure that charitable funds are not diverted to individuals or organizations involved in terrorism. The United States and Saudi Arabia will also be submitting the names of the branches to the UN 1267 Sanctions Committee for inclusion on the committee’s list. Once the names are included on the list, all UN member states will be obliged to freeze their assets and implement other sanctions.

Efforts to deprive terrorists of the funds they need to operate and recruit can only be effective with strong international cooperation. Today’s actions, undertaken jointly with the Government of Saudi Arabia, are an example of the important steps we must continue to take if we are to be successful in our efforts. We have previously submitted for UN designation six branches of Al-Haramain with Saudi Arabia (Bosnia, Somalia, Indonesia, Pakistan, Kenya and Tanzania), as well as Vazir, the successor to the Bosnian branch:

Designation of Bosnian and Somali branches on March 11, 2002;
Designation of Vazir, alias/successor to the Bosnia Al-Haramain office on December 22, 2003;
Designation of Indonesian, Pakistani, Tanzanian and Kenyan branches on January 22, 2004.

The US and Saudi Arabia last year [2003] formed a Joint Task Force on Terrorism Finance to identify and act against terrorist financing. … Saudi Arabia has undertaken additional meaningful steps to combat terrorist financing: Saudi banks are implementing strict “know your customer” rules and the Saudis have taken steps to prevent the misuse of charities. Saudi Arabia’s creation of a Charity Commission that will assume oversight responsibility for Saudi-based charities marks a clear step toward increasing transparency and accountability in a sector that has unfortunately been exploited by terrorists to the detriment of both well-intentioned donors and needy recipients.

The US website FrontPage Magazine on September 16, 2003, noted: “In September 2002, Indonesian al-Qaida informant Omar al-Faruq told the CIA that Al-Haramain was used to remit funds to him from bin Laden. Al Haramain’s website used to have a direct link to qoqaz.net, which is a website that is part of the al-Qaida propaganda network. The website is owned by Azzam Publications, bin Laden’s propaganda vehicle, and operated from Houston Texas. Al-Haramain is also involved with the Al Baraka banking empire, which was also named in the 9/11 lawsuit. Al-Baraka finances the activities of bin Laden and al-Qaida. In his Senate testimony in July 2003, terrorism expert Steve Emerson said that although initially Saudi Arabia denied allegations that Al-Haramain were involved in terrorist activities, in June (2003) they stated that Al-Haramain was not acting according to its charter and announced that all foreign offices were to be closed. Emerson did remark that the Ashland [Oregon] office was still in operation. Al-Haramain has another location in the United States.

According to the 9/11 complaint, Al-Haramain owns a building in Springfield, Missouri that is home of the Islamic Center of Springfield, which is a mosque.”

In June 2004, after Saudi Arabia officially dissolved Al-Haramain, the organization said that its works, henceforth, would only be inside Saudi Arabia.


Copyright 2004 Defense & Foreign Affairs Strategic Policy
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Dr Darko Trifunovic - Bosnia and Terrorism :Mufti Mustafa Ceric tells the West " I am proud that Islam defines my European patriotism"

Bosnia and terrorism : Mufti Mustafa Ceric tells the West " I am proud that Islam defines my European patriotism"

Bosnia as launching pad for international terrorism - the Abdel Rahman - Bin Laden connection
February 21, 2005

Dr Mustafa Ceric: Came to prominence during Balkans wars

MIM: Ceric made it clear in a recent interview (see below) that he sees the UK as one of the first 'trophies' in the Islamisation of Europe. He is falsely presented as a 'man of peace' and his visit was reported as an effort to 'increase understanding' of Muslims position in Europe. His words are clearly a call for Muslims to further insinuate themselves into the social and political institutions in the West. He also expressed his pleasure at the increasing dhimmitude he found in the UK 'praising' Britain's accomodation of Islam and Muslims.

"They (Muslims) know where they stand in this society"-they have the freedom to oppose the government for instance, over the war in Iraq" -"London is good place for us to discuss what the third encounter will mean".

This encounter does not mean giving up an Islamic identity, he says. This future Western Muslim identity will represent neither assimilation nor isolation, but co-operation."

He then warns that :."...governments must essentially buy the trust of Muslims by institutionalising their faith - giving it state sponsorship through schools, official bodies and so on..."

"...Muslims don't like this idea, they think that governments would control them," he says. "But, my dear brothers, I say you are losing your sovereignty already if they [the police] are entering your homes and mosques..."

----------------------------------------

MIM: Mustafa Ceric the Grand Mufti of Bosnia, counts among his international activities membership and participation in with radical Islamist individuals and organisations also based in the United States. http://www.naqshbandi.net/haqqani/events/speakers.html

Mustapha Ceric is listed as board member of the Center for Balanced Development, which was founded by the Austrian Islamo facist Hans Koechler . The board includes John Esposito and Louay Safi. http://www.i-p-o.org/cbd.htm

Ceric is also works with the UK branch of the AMSS - The Association of Muslim Social Scientists, which is the sister organisation of the IIIT the International Institute of Islamic Thought, a Wahhabist funded group which is being investigated for terrorism funding. http://www.militantislammonitor.org/article/id/214

As Grand Mufti of Bosnia , Ceric is also aligned with Yusuf Islam, aka Cat Stevens,who was recently banned from entering the United States because of links to terrorism funding. http://www.militantislammonitor.org/article/id/293

Islam's Muslim Aid 'charity' , was placed on a list by Spanish police in 2002 as a source of recruiting and funding for Muhajideen Al Qaeda fighters in Bosnia aka ' the white Al Qaeda'. http://artsweb.bham.ac.uk/bmms/1996/02February96.html#Bosnia%20visit

According to a recent Bosnian new report Mustafa Ceric also played a leading role in the CIRL,. a funding front which was organised by Osama bin Laden and Sheik Abdel Rahman, that funtioned as " the only link between the Bosnian Muslim political leadership of the time and its wealthy Islamic benefactors"."...key people in the CIRKL in charge of Bosnia as Dr. Fatih al Hassanein, Hasan Cengic, Salim Sabic, Muhamed Catic, Mustafa Ceric, Husein Zivalj, and Senad Sahinpasic. http://www.beta.co.yu/korupcija/eng/cist2.asp?ci=1159920

"...With the power of money the CIRKL formed an illegal ruling oligarchy..."Money was also allegedly used to "install the great imams Hasan Cengic and Mustafa Ceric through their militant muftis, the main ideological force of the Bosniak Muslim Party of Democratic Action and maker of its personnel policy."

The authors of the intelligence report expected this group to resort to "organized terrorist retribution" basing this assumption on the fact that "the CIRKL has undergone considerable financial consolidation and is linked to Middle Eastern extremist organizations..."

--------------------------------------------------------------------------

MIM: After 9/11 Ceric was in the forefront of crying discrimination when his Al Qaeda funding front was endangered the US started to close down Bosnian 'charities' http://www.mediareviewnet.com/BOSNIAs%20Islamic%20community%20accuses%20govt%20of%20discrimination.htm

SARAJEVO June 5 Sapa-AFP


Bosnia's Islamic community accused the country's authorities Wednesday of
discriminating against Muslim humanitarian organisations following the
anti-terror campaign launched after the September 11 attacks in the United
States.


"An atmosphere has been created here in which people stand accused of
terrorism even though not a single claim has been confirmed through
appropriate legal procedures," Mustafa Ceric, head of the Islamic community
in Bosnia, told a press conference.


Ceric voiced fears that beneficiaries of Islamic charities might suffer the
most, saying that people were coming "daily" to his offices asking "what
would happen to them if (Islamic) charities leave Bosnia...."

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/4283717.stm

Islamic encounters of the third kind

Friday prayers: Thousands attended Dr Ceric's sermon


Is Islam secure in Europe? One of the continent's leading Islamic thinkers says the future direction of Islam may depend on it being so.

You may not have heard of him, but the Grand Mufti of Bosnia is the kind of person who gets to have tea with the Prince of Wales.

On a whistle-stop speaking tour of London late last week, Dr Mustafa Ceric spent a morning debating the future of Islam and the West with Prince Charles.

And it's Dr Ceric's track record of pushing the boundaries of what is publicly sayable among Muslims that leads to such interest in his views.

The Grand Mufti is the leading Islamic legal authority among Muslims in the Balkans - some of his supporters have even dubbed him "Islam's Nelson Mandela".

He represents that strand of the faith that clung on in Europe after the Turkish Ottoman empire rolled back from the frontiers of the West.


It's difficult to admit but Muslims [in the Middle East] now need to learn from Muslims in the West - the wise men of the Islamic east and the rational men of the west must meet - and then we will have moral men

And so, with a European and Islamic heritage ("I am proud that Islam defines my European patriotism", he says) he is well placed to see where things are going.

He came to prominence during the bloody break-up of Yugoslavia by speaking out against those who used faith as a justification for violence.

Today he has an international reputation as a man of peace and is involved in efforts to counter fears about Islam in the United States in the wake of 9/11.

Rights and fears

Appearing in London to talk to British Muslims about their own fears amid security-related tensions, he says that they themselves may hold the key to the faith's future in the world. And London may be the arena where this Islamic identity is being formed.

So is Islam secure in Europe?

"We have two extremes of approach. One says that Muslims are not secure and that Europe is an anti-Islamic environment. The other extreme says Europe is a haven for Islam and Muslims," he says.


ISLAM AND THE WEST Early Baghdad thinkers developed Greek learning Islamic Spain re-introduced ideas to Europe European Muslims export ideas back East?

"I believe that the truth is somewhere in the middle because we are all in a process of learning.

"The West is learning about Muslims - trying to figure out what they are doing here in Europe and [asking questions such as] how should governments deal with this phenomenon."

"Well, we've been here for a long time - but the presence now is different to what it has been through history."

The difference, he argues, is that European-born Muslims are quietly embracing European notions of freedom and human rights. This can be seen no more clearly in the rise of young, professional - but religiously devout - Muslim women who challenge the idea that it's men who should have all the say.

But thanks to today's political and media climate, argues Dr Ceric, Muslims in the West need "freedom from fear and freedom from poverty" - both of which are undermining their position in the West.

"Europe is facing some kind of dilemma of fear [over Islam] and that Muslims themselves are seeking freedom from this fear.

"No-one knows where this process will lead - but if we are rational people we must accept the challenge of what I call the 'third encounter' between the West and Islam."

Moments of history

Dr Ceric says there have been two major historical moments when Islam and Western civilisation have met and changed each other.


GRAND MUFTI Born in Bosnia Studied at Cairo's top Al-Azhar University PhD in the USA Becomes Grand Mufti on return home A grand mufti is a leading Islamic scholar

During the first, Islam's early Baghdad philosophers preserved and developed the learning of the Greeks. During the second, these ideas and more were sent back to Europe via Islamic Spain, sowing some of the seeds for the Renaissance.

But this third meeting is different because it has the potential to change the nature of Islam itself. If European-born Muslims look inside their faith for what are presented as Western notions of human rights and individual freedom, they will find them, he argues.

The challenge will be to convince other Muslims that these ideas are universal - and then western Muslims can export them back to the heart of Islamic society.

"They cannot do it at the moment, but if they are given this freedom [from fear and poverty], they will succeed.

"It's difficult to admit but Muslims [in the Middle East] now need to learn from Muslims in the West.

"The wise men of the Islamic East and the rational men of the West must meet - and then we will have moral men."

London at the centre

The problem he faces however is that there is enormous resistance of the West coming from the East. The UK and London, however, will play a vital role in negotiating this tension, says Dr Ceric.

Its leading mosques are full most Fridays and many British-born or educated thinkers are urging their congregations to take the best of the West and put it to good use. "London is well-placed because of its history," says Dr Ceric. "And British Muslims are more emancipated than other European Muslims.

"They know where they stand in this society - they have freedom to oppose the government, for instance, over the war in Iraq. London is a good place for us to discuss what this third encounter will mean."

This encounter does not mean giving up an Islamic identity, he says. This future Western Muslim identity will represent neither assimilation nor isolation, but co-operation.

He likens the process to that experienced by British Jews: at first outsiders, they later became part of the fabric of society but have defended their identity and world view. In turn, that world view influences decisions of the state and international relations.

But Dr Ceric says the question is whether or not European governments are helping Muslims along this path.

Paris got into bother over its ban on religious symbols in schools - and London continues to face community criticisms that the anti-terror laws criminalise Muslims. Throughout Europe's capitals there is an emotive debate over modern multicultural societies and whether they trap people into religiously closed communities and encourage division?

Dr Ceric says governments must essentially buy the trust of Muslims by institutionalising their faith - giving it state sponsorship through schools, official bodies and so on. Resistance is a "tribal mentality" that allows others to present Muslims as alien outsiders.

"Muslims don't like this idea, they think that governments would control them," he says. "But, my dear brothers, I say you are losing your sovereignty already if they [the police] are entering your homes and mosques.

"I say let them in today because if not they will come in tomorrow and the consequences are a long-term bad image for Islam."

-----------------------

MIM: Political commentator Srdja Trifovic warns that "politically correct" Westerners unchallenged acceptance of Muslims distorted views of history and Muslim victimisation "is extremely dangerous".

"...Muslims, as Christians once did, tend to sympathize with each other in a familiar and more or less nationalist fashion. If this tendency goes unchecked it produces a lunatic account of world affairs in which Muslim societies are always victims of the West and always innocent. It is not just the extremists who believe that in Palestine, Chechnya, Bosnia, Kosovo, and Kashmir, the Muslims are entirely in the right: at present, almost every Muslim thinks so. The "politically correct" Westerners accept the Muslim judgment. But this is extremely dangerous, as the West cannot afford to concede such a large measure of moral approval to so self-conscious and agitated a force in world affairs..." http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/News/Trifkovic04/NewsST011004.html

-------------------------------------------------

http://www.beta.co.yu/korupcija/eng/cist2.asp?ci=1159920

MIM: Ceric declared in the article above that "I am proud that Islam defines my European patriotism".

It also appears to have been very lucrative for him as well. According to this recent article Ceric is linked to the CIRL , a funding operation "which was in charge of all aid donated to Bosniak Muslims by Islamic countries" The CIRL was started by Sheik Abdel Rahman and Osama Bin Laden.

"Information collected by Austrian and German intelligence agents and published in August 2004 in Banjaluka`s Patriot paper claims that Islamic terrorists, including Osama bin Laden and Sheik Rahman, organized CIRKL, ... The group was set up as the only link between the Bosnian Muslim political leadership of the time and its wealthy Islamic benefactors...

"...Instead of the Bosniak government, it was the illegal CIRKL that was in control of all aid donated to the Bosniak nation by Islamic countries. The Bosniak nation is 100 percent financially dependant on the CIRKL. The CIRKL is the absolute master of almost all hard currency," according to the intelligence document, which dates back to Nov. 6, 1995, and is labeled top secret.

The document also list the key people in the CIRKL in charge of Bosnia as Dr. Fatih al Hassanein, Hasan Cengic, Salim Sabic, Muhamed Catic, Mustafa Ceric, Husein Zivalj, and Senad Sahinpasic..."

---------------------------------------------------

"Bosnian Terror Assets moving to Iraq ,Afghanistan, to resist "War On Terror " as manoeuvering underway to replace Izetbegovic"

http://128.121.186.47/ISSA/reports/Balkan/Oct2703.htm

GIS/Defense & Foreign Affairs Daily sources in Bosnia reported on October 16, 2003, that a mujahedin training facility in Bosnia was now part of a process to send fighters into Iraq, through a network which involved transiting Turkey and Syria. The training was, according to the sources, taking place at a base near Tuzla, and some elements of a Turkish battalion based at Tuzla have reportedly played a significant rôle in the process of supporting the Islamist fighters.

If the sources are correct (and further investigation is now underway), then the movement of of Islamist fighters from Bosnia eastward would — apart from interaction between some mujahedin with Chechnya — be a significant milestone. It would also reflect that the al-Qaida and Iranian-backed Islamist infrastructure in the Balkans, built up since the beginning of the 1990s, was now being used as an integral part of the war against US forces in Iraq.

As well, there were indications that the Bosnian-based Islamists had also been used to support military operations against the anti-terrorist Coalition in Afghanistan..."

"...The final serious candidate to replace Alija Izetbegovic, according to Slobodna Bosna, was Mustafa Ceric, who is supported by the Islamic Religious Council (Ulema B-H), the religious part of SDA and some diplomats from Western countries..."
-------------------------------------------------------------------


Mustafa Ceric " I am proud that Islam defines my European patriotism"

WEALTH THROUGH PATRIOTISM

BANJALUKA, 27.1.2005. (Beta) - Over the past several months organized crime investigators with the Bosnia-Herzegovina Prosecutor`s Office have been scrutinizing high-ranking politician Hasan Cengic for financial abuse and involvement in organized crime.

John Mekner, head of the Special Chamber for Organized Crime of the Prosecutor`s Office, confirmed in a statement to BETA that the investigation of Cengic, a senior member of the Party of Democratic Action, is still in progress. However, he was unwilling to say whether the cabinet will stay in the hands of prosecutor Jonathan Smith, who recently left Bosnia on orders from Washington after receiving death threats.

"I do not think it is important which prosecutor handles the case and I will not comment on which cases have been delegated to the Special Chamber," said Mekner.

Mekner also did not want to discuss how much progress the investigation has made or whether Cengic is likely to be indicted anytime soon.

Embezzlement is suspected

Financial inspectors in the Muslim-Croat federation has found that Cengic took possession of at least $8 million in donations from Islamic countries that had arrived during the Bosnian war. He did this through an Islamic charity called the Third World Relief Agency to start and illegally fund several companies.

Foreign intelligence agencies have labeled Cengic as a key figure in the CIRKL, a clandestine Islamic organization that controlled all financial donations coming in from the Islamic world during the war.

Commenting on the allegations, Seada Palavric, a vice president of the Party of Democratic Action, called them more "in the series of lies and foolishness being said about him."

"If there were one inkling of truth in what is being written about Cengic, he would already be in prison. The Party of Democratic Action has no such information. On the contrary, we have entirely different data that shows Cengic never transferred any of the aid meant for the protection of Bosniaks during the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina," she told us.

She added that police investigated the party and its financial operations in recent years, as did numerous financial institutions, and never discovered anything that could be taken as indicating financial abuse.

Palavric also denied that her party has heard Cengic has been subject to a careful investigation by the Special Chamber for Organized Crime in recent months.

Lawyers aren`t criminals

She did, however, stress that nobody would be surprised to learn that Cengic is being investigated because "that would be yet another attempt to discredit the supporters of the army of Bosnia-Herzegovina and turn them into criminals."

Information collected by Austrian and German intelligence agents and published in August 2004 in Banjaluka`s Patriot paper claims that Islamic terrorists, including Osama bin Laden and Sheik Rahman, organized CIRKL, the Islamic group mentioned above, before the war. The group was set up as the only link between the Bosnian Muslim political leadership of the time and its wealthy Islamic benefactors.

"Instead of the Bosniak government, it was the illegal CIRKL that was in control of all aid donated to the Bosniak nation by Islamic countries. The Bosniak nation is 100 percent financially dependant on the CIRKL. The CIRKL is the absolute master of almost all hard currency," according to the intelligence document, which dates back to Nov. 6, 1995, and is labeled top secret.

The document also list the key people in the CIRKL in charge of Bosnia as Dr. Fatih al Hassanein, Hasan Cengic, Salim Sabic, Muhamed Catic, Mustafa Ceric, Husein Zivalj, and Senad Sahinpasic.

"With the power of money the CIRKL formed an illegal ruling oligarchy. This isolated and installed extremist Islamic clique consisting of 300-400 individuals, including militant imams, senior military officials, diplomats, government officials, senior officials of the Party of Democratic Action, and members of the intelligence community. They have forced themselves upon the Bosniak people," according to the document, parts of which were once published in the Slobodna Bosna paper.

Money was also allegedly used to "install the great imams Hasan Cengic and Mustafa Ceric through their militant muftis, the main ideological force of the Bosniak Muslim Party of Democratic Action and maker of its personnel policy."

The authors of the intelligence report expected this group to resort to "organized terrorist retribution" basing this assumption on the fact that "the CIRKL has undergone considerable financial consolidation and is linked to Middle Eastern extremist organizations."

The CIRKL expanded its influence by way of the Third World Relief Agency (TWRA), run by Sudanese Fatih al Hassanein.

Weapons instead of humanitarian aid

The Patriot newspaper also said that Hassanein used money he received from his government and the terrorist organizations of Bin Laden and Rahman to buy weapons for the Bosniak-led Army of Bosnia-Herzegovina. According to the paper, TWRA manager Hassanein supplied the army with weapons through the Croatian finance and defense ministries.

Hassanein founded the TWRA in 1987, when it was involved in collecting donations for the Muslim Brotherhood in Sudan.

Furthermore, the paper carried a copy of a document dated April 29, 1992, and approved by a special Muslim committee in Croatia in support of the then Republic of Bosnia-Herzegovina. The document confirms that the committee received "$300,000 from Kemal Sarag Al-Din and Fatih Al Hassanein for buying weapons that are to be sent to Bosnia- Herzegovina."

"The weapons are to be purchased through the Croatian finance and defense ministries, which has already been agreed with the government of Bosnia-Herzegovina."

Intelligence data also indicates that over $2.5 billion reached the TWRA from Islamic countries and that on July 10, 1992, then Bosnian Foreign Minister Haris Silajdzic signed a paper authorizing Al Hassanein and the TWRA to collect donations for refugees in Bosnia- Herzegovina.

Instead of humanitarian aid, the money was used to organize illegal shipments of arms from Western countries to Bosnia-Herzegovina

After the Sept. 11, 2001, attack in New York City, the U.S. ordered an investigation into all Islamic humanitarian relief agencies in Bosnia, including the TWRA.

The TWRA was also probed by German and Austrian police.

Most of the donated Islamic money was used by the senior officials of the CIRKL for personal gain and buying weapons, according to the documents.

In 1991 and 1992, after illegally purchasing weapons, largely through Croatia, the CIRKL distributed it to Muslim extremists in Bosnia and in Serbia`s Sandzak region.

Well-informed sources say Hasan Cengic was the organizer of this operation.

Financial scams

Reports from financial investigators state that in February 1996, Cengic founded a humanitarian organization called the Foundation for Assistance to the Bosnian Muslims as a front.

Its top officials were Irfan Ljevakovic, Husein Zivalj, and Dervis Djurdjevic, the same men who had been in charge of the money al Hassanein had been funneling into Bosnia via the TWRA.

Immediately after its founding, the organization received EUR2.4 million in starting capital. In May that year Cengic and Hassanein had a meeting in Istanbul, where the Sudanese had taken up living after being deported by Austria. They signed a contract granting Cengic`s alleged humanitarian organization EUR2.4 million worth of trucks.

The trucks were supposedly to be used to transport humanitarian aid, but they were immediately transferred to Cengic`s company, Bosanska Investiciona Organizacija (BIO).

To cover its tracks, BIO started Bosanski Transprotni Servis, a shipping firm, and invested the trucks as founding capital.

Afterwards the Foundation for Assistance to the Bosnian Muslims purchased an AN-74 transport plane, which was immediately given to BIO.

Investigators have learned that the price given for the plane, $300,000, was unrealistic and that its real value was 10 times that figure: $3 million.

Seeking his personal airport

The plane, of course, was not used for the transport of humanitarian aid. Instead, it was used for commercial purposes. According to newspaper reports, Cengic has a fleet of five planes.

Since neither the trucks nor the planes went through customs, the Muslim-Croat federation was left several million euros short of revenues.

According to media reports, Cengic`s goal was to secure the airport in Visoko near Sarajevo, which would have given him control of Bosnia`s entire civil aviation sector.

At a meeting in Zagreb on Aug. 15, 1997, an international community committee for assistance to the Bosnian Muslims voted to transfer all of the organization`s investments in the Visoko airport to BIO. This gave Cengic`s company a majority stake in the airport and within a very short time it had invested almost EUR19 million in the facility.

The airport takeover contract was signed by Salim Sabic, a former adviser to wartime Bosnian president Alija Izetbegovic and key figure in the CIRKL in Croatia, on behalf of BIO.

Cengic is believed by many to be one of the richest men in Bosnia.

In May 2003 the U.S. barred Cengic from entry, froze his assets, and prohibited any U.S. company from doing business with him after he became suspected of obstruction of the Dayton peace agreement and ties with Islamic terrorists.

------------------

http://www.muslimedia.com/archives/special98/random.htm

MIM: Excerpts from Post Dayton pre election Bosnia details the swearing in of Ceric who spoke "free of the constraints that the presence of non- Muslims had imposed elsewhere".

Not until one sees the cemeteries can one comprehend the scale of the slaughter and the selfless sacrifice of the young men who left for the front. Not even the acres of graves in Behisht-e Zahra outside Tehran can prepare one for the poignancy of Bosnian cemeteries. Only when I saw them did I fully appreciate what Ejup Ganic, the vice president, had said to us a few days earlier about 'the young men who went to the front knowing it was not likely they would return.' These were the flowers of a generation, Bosnia's hope for the future, for in a war it is always the best who get killed.

Ejup Ganic's reference to the shuhada occurred during a speech on the occasion of a dinner to honour the foreign guests who attended Mustafa Ceric's installation as Ra'is al-Ulama. The elegance of the setting, the well-trained waiters all spoke the influence of the old Austro-Hungarian empire; graciousness and charm shone throughout.

Ejup Ganic spoke without a single mistake in English grammar for some 10 or 15 minutes. After an interval, for the dinner was friendly and informal, he was followed by Dr Ceric, remembered by many in Britain as the man whose discourse at the Muslim Parliament had reduced people to tears. He spoke brilliantly, totally at ease, free of the constraints that the presence of non-Muslims had imposed elsewhere, touching the hearts and minds of everyone present.

------------------------

MIM: In 1997 Mustafa Ceric dined with, and personally thanked Yusuf Islam aka Cat Stevens, for the help and support of "the Muslim community in Britain". Islam had just launched his Muslim Aid 'charity' funding front and had been the treasurer of the Muslim Council of Britain at the time. Last year Islam was barred from entering the U.S. on grounds that he posted 'a security threat' and was involved with terrorism funding. Besides Hamas, the main focus of Islam's 'charitable' activities has been Bosnia. In 2002 the Spanish police cited Islam and Muslim Aid as being behind the funding and recruitment of Al Qaeda muhajideen in Bosnia . http://www.militantislammonitor.org/article/id/293

http://www.webstar.co.uk/~musnews/alond102.html

Around London with Rais al-'Ulama

By Betul Iyilik

Dr Mustafa Ceric, Rais al-'Ulama (Supreme Head of the Islamic Community) in Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH), on an official visit to London between September 23 to 26, held meeetings with leaders of various faith groups. On the first day of his visit, Dr Ceric, who was the guest of the Foreign Office, was met by Dr George Carey, Archbishop of Canterbury and Canon Richard Marsh, the Archbishop's Secretary for Ecumenical Affairs. They discussed issues of "mutual interest". He also met and had dinner with Tom Phillips, Head of Eastern Adriatic Department and Mr Dominic Micklejohn Head of Bosnia Section. On the second day, Mustafa Ceric visited the Bosnia and Herzegovina Islamic Centre in north-west London, and met Imam Fahruddin Hamidovic and representatives of the Bosnian community. Dr Ceric was briefed about the Centre, which was opened two years ago. The activities of the Centre are wide.They include supplementary primary school in the Bosnian language and religious education, humanitarian activities and other community work. The Centre is also a focal point for the Bosnian refugees. The purpose of the meeting was to establish a better link between the Bosnian community in the United Kingdom and the Supreme Islamic Council in BiH. It was agreed that the Centre will become an official Bosnian organisation in the UK. It will also search for a suitable and larger premises that will become the permanent centre for the Bosnian community. At the meeting, Dr Mustafa Ceric discussed the current situation in Bosnia, including the repatriation of the Bosnian refugees, described as "a long term process with a number of problems".

The other part of the meeting was with Yusuf Islam. Dr Ceric thanked, on behalf of the people of Bosnia, the Muslim community in Britain for their help and support. The Rais al-'Ulama added that inspite of the "incredibly difficult years, we are still alive and we are ready to face to the future". He said that during his visit to South Africa, he was asked whether the suffering of the Bosnians was a punishment from Allah for their sins. Dr Ceric replied:"God does not punish those who are weak, he punishes those who are strong, and I don't believe that we have committed more sins than the rest of the world or that we are stronger than rest of the world." He reminded the Muslims world-wide that as Muslims "we need to take care of ourselves and not to wait for some body else to come and rescue you. So it is the time to wake up and accept our responsibilities". He added that Muslims in the West have to "use the freedom and democracy to participate in the society so that your voice can be heard and it can be helpful to us". In the afternoon Dr Ceric was the guest of the Calamus Foundation in central London where he briefed the members of the Foundation about the latest situation in Bosnia and summed it up thus: "Bosnia is like a very beautiful lady whose face has been destroyed by hatred and unfortunately I don't think it will ever be the same as it used to be. What we are doing at the moment is to try to bandage the face. We will perform plastic surgery on the face but she needs a miracle. However I see in the near future that the lady is going to give birth to a new lady who will be more beautiful than her mother."

The Rais al-'Ulama had a dinner engagement with Yusuf Islam where a number of Muslim activists were invited. He recalled his encounter with a Christian priest from Lebanon who asked if the Muslim leadership intended to implement Shari'ah in BiH. "I told him that he was violating my human rights by asking me this question." Dr Ceric added: "Of course, I am going to apply Shari'ah. People generally consider Islam as beautifull (tourists visit mosques to admire their beauty), this is good. But Islam is first and foremost a religion of Law." He explained to the priest Islamic political theory. Muslims live in three territories: Dar al-Islam, Dar al-Harb and Dar al-Islah. In the first case, Muslims are obliged to implement Shari'ah. In Dar al-Islam Muslims have peace and security, freedom and dignity. In Dar al-Harb Muslims have no human rights and in Dar al-Islah Muslims implement Islam to the maximum of their ability. BiH comes under the latter category, explained Dr Ceric. "We live under Aqd al-ijtima' (Contract of Agreement)." He then told the priest that as a dhimmi the Christians can live under Muslim protection. "I wish Christianity had similar laws so that we could be protected - protected against rapes, killings and expulsions, as happened in BiH." Dr Ceric acknowledged the help given to Bosnia by Muslim governments: "If it wasn't for the help from the Islamic governments BiH would not have survived."

On the third day of his visit, Dr Ceric went to Islamic Relief World Wide Foundation offices in London. They have been working in BiH since before the invasion by Serbia in 1992. Dr Ceric expressed his admiration for the humanitarian work Islamic Relief undertook during the course of the war and for its continuing efforts through the numerous development projects that have been put into action since the conclusion of the conflict. He said: "Many agencies withdrew their support for the Bosnian people following the Dayton Peace Accord, although it is well known that following a conflict there is still much work to be done and suffering to be endured." Islamic Relief's projects include fish farm, medical aid for disabled people, women's community and training centre and Planaka Goat Project (in Bihac). In the evening, the Rais al-'Ulama met the members of the UK Action Committee on Islamic Affairs at the Central Mosque in Regents Park, London. Dr Ceric asked why was it that now non-Muslims do not want to live with Muslims in Bosnia. "We should examine why they don't want to live in Muslim environment. Is something wrong with them or with us? If the problem is with them, we shouldn't worry about it, but if it is with us it means we have to find an answer to solve the problem."

According to Dr Ceric an inter-faith council has been set up in Sarajevo headed By Jacob Finzi, a Bosnian Jew and Cardinal Vinko Puljic, Archbishop of Sarajevo, Ortodox Metropolitan Nikolai of Dabar and Dr Ceric. The aim of the Council is to break down to the barriers between faiths which have been exacerbated by the fighting in Bosnia. The Rais believes that the only way out in the inter-faith dialogue is for Christianity to "develop the idea of recognition" and for Muslims to "develop the idea of tolerance" and "if we swap the ideas then we can meet in the middle of somewhere". He added that Bosnia, especially Sarajevo, "is still the biggest market for different ideas - Nationalism, Fascism, Democracy and Capitalism. All national religions, political movements, every kind of organisation from the world are there." He said he was hopeful since the elections and he said the international community, who "were irresponsible before when they waited till Karadjic finished his job", is now taking its job more seriously. "Fortunately Karadjic did not succeed," he added. Dr Ceric believed that although the Dayton Accord "was not just", it did stop the war. There are four conditions essential for the peace process: war criminals should be brought to the War Crimes Tribunal in the Hague, freedom of movement should be established, media should be free and refugees should be allowed to return to their homes. On the last day of his visit, Dr Ceric attended a conference at The Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies, which, The Muslims News was told was "a closed meeting". Other engagements included meetings at: Maimonides Foundation, London Islamic Cultural Centre, University of Kingston and Interfaith Foundation.

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MIM: Srdja Trifkovic sums up the radical Islamist weltaanshauung of Ceric . The Mufti epitomises the new 'European' Muslim. Schooled in Shari'a at the Al Azhar- the alma mater of Adullah Azzam, Bin Laden's mentor and home to the Muslim Brotherhood, with a Phd in Islamic studies from the University of Chicago.

"...Where does more than a decade of U.S. involvement leave the Balkans? "The small jihad is now finished and we have—some of us—survived the war. The Bosnian state is intact. But now we have to fight a bigger, second jihad," says Mustafa Ceric, the Reis-ul-Ulema in Bosnia-Herzegovina—educated, incidentally, at Al-Azhar in Cairo and the University of Chicago..."

http://www.grecoreport.com/the_balkan_terror_threat.htm

The Balkan Terror Threat

by Srdja Trifkovic

A chain is as strong as its weakest link. In President Bush's "War on Terror," that weak link is not in the Middle East or North Africa or the Subcontinent but in Europe. For years Chronicles has been warning that flawed pro-Muslim Western policies would turn the Balkans from a "protectorate of the New World Order into an Islamic threat to Western interests." ... Such warnings were routinely ignored or discounted by the media and politicians alike. This attitude is rapidly changing, however. A spate of media reports and statements by Western officials over the past two months indicates that the threat is finally being taken seriously.

"U.S. to build Balkan anti-terrorism center in Bulgaria," news agencies reported on January 6, to monitor and detect terrorist threats to the United States and other countries. In addition to the CIA-staffed center, Bulgarian media reported, the FBI also plans to set up an office in Sofia. U.S. intelligence experts were quoted as saying that Al Qaeda has a training base in the Balkans and uses the region as a terror route to the West.

That same week, an Associated Press report warned that terrorists would use the Balkan route to sneak a nuclear weapon into Europe by land. Tom Sanderson of the Center for Strategic and International Studies and Chris Wright of the Royal Institute of International Affairs in London claimed that smuggling routes through Southeastern Europe were well established and that there was "a lot of scope" for collusion between terrorist groups and criminal gangs. Both criminals and terrorists benefit from heroin trafficking, most of it of Afghan origin. The trade is largely controlled by Albanian Muslims, with the mujahideen providing the logistics.

Der Spiegel reported on December 8, 2003, that the "monstrous" King Fahd mosque in Sarajevo -- the largest in Europe, on which the Saudis spent a total of $20 million -- is a breeding ground for Islamic extremism in Bosnia, with some preachers openly inciting the faithful. Western security experts have said that Bosnia could become "a hotbed of extremists ready to ... carry the fight of the Islamic terror syndicates against the 'godless West' to the southeast of Europe"(1).

This gives cause for "extreme concern" to a German intelligence chief, August Hanning. Der Spiegel goes on to quote a French expert as saying that, of some 5,000 foreign mujahideen who had fought on behalf of Izetbegovic [in Bosnia], many remained behind. The number is unknown, but there are "too many to be safe," according to George Friedman, director of Stratfor, The Balkans are "of strategic importance" to Al Qaeda, he says, and it can use the region for its goals at any time. Western officials reflect such concerns with increasing frequency. The U.S. ambassador in Sarajevo, Clifford Bond, thus declared on December 17 that there is a terrorist threat in Bosnia because of "foreign elements" who arrived there during the war and stayed on. In the same week, the cabinet of Greece's Prime Minister Costas Simitis expressed concern over the threat from Bosnia to the Olympic Games [sic] in August 2004 (2).

"U.N. Adds Bosnian Charity Director to Al Qaeda List," Reuters reported only days later. Safet Durguti, an Albanian born in Kosovo, was added to the list of 300 individuals whose assets should be frozen because of suspected ties to Osama bin Laden or his Al Qaeda network. Durgati -- apparently the key link between Islamic fundamentalists in Kosovo and Bosnia -- is the director of Vazir, a charity based in the Bosnian city of Travnik. According to the U.S. Department of the Treasury, Vazir was simply another name for the Al-Haramain Islamic Foundation, a Saudi charity that was placed on the U. N. list in March 2002.

Dozens of similar statements and articles appeared in different Western sources last January alone. Policy analysts and government officials alike freely admit that the problem exists. It has acquired massive proportions and may not be easily managed any longer. Whether it can be resolved short of a major restructuring of the current Balkan architecture is unclear.

The threat is not limited to a few elusive extremists: The ruling establishment in Sarajevo has had a symbiotic relationship with the sources of Islamic radicalism for over a decade. "Iran, Bosnia to Expand Ties," reported Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting on December 21, regarding a meeting of the Bosnian ambassador to Tehran, Ibrahim Efendic, and Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani. The latter said that "the jihad of the Bosnian and Palestinian nations is praiseworthy and a source of honor for Muslims":

The resistance and faith of these nations will be registered in the history of Islam,

he added ... Highlighting the geographical status of the Balkans, Rafsanjani said

Iran attaches great importance to Bosnia and Herzegovina and expressed the hope

to witness further expansion of bilateral ties between the two countries. The out-

going Bosnian ambassador lauded the humanitarian aid rendered by the Islamic

Republic of Iran.

The significance of this overlooked story is that Bosnian Muslim government officials are received and treated in Tehran as allies in a jihad and that Muslims see Bosnia as no less important than Palestine to their strategic design. As for Iran's "humanitarian aid," this is a euphemism for illegal arms shipments from Tehran to Sarajevo in 1994. They were carried out with the active connivance of the Clinton administration and in violation of the arms embargo initially demanded by Clinton. Along with the weapons, Iranian Revolutionary Guards and VEVAK intelligence agents entered Bosnia in large numbers.

The problem of collusion between U.S. administrations and Islamic radicals antedates the wars of Yugoslav succession. Its roots go back to the support Osama bin Laden and others received from the United States following the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979. Mistaken and shortsighted as this strategy turned out to be, it may have been justified by the dictates of the Cold War. The underlying assumption was that militant Muslims could be used and discarded -- like Diem, Noriega, the Shah, and the Contras. For the ensuing two decades, Washington almost invariably supported the Muslims -- most notably in Bosnia and Kosovo. By January 1996, [neocons] Jacob Heilbrunn and Michael Lind of the New Republic approvingly wrote of the U.S. role as the leader of Muslim nations from the Persian Gulf to the Balkans, with the Ottoman lands becoming "the heart of a third American empire"(3).

The strategists who had sought to turn militant Islam into a pliant tool had underestimated the danger of "blowback" at first, but over the years, they have bound good men to bad policy and reinforced failure with gold. Their strategy of effective support for Islamic ambitions in pursuit of short-term political or military objectives has helped to turn Islamic radicalism into a truly global phenomenon.

The Bosnian chapter of this strategy dates back to the administration of President George H. W. Bush, whose Acting Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger made it clear in early 1992 that his goal was to support the Muslim side in Bosnia in order to mollify the Muslim world and to counter any perception of an anti-Muslim bias regarding American policies in the Middle East. President Clinton's policy in the Balkans further strengthened an already aggressive Islamic base in the heart of Europe. The unspoken assumption of the architects of such policies -- that generosity would be rewarded by loyalty -- is mistaken: Loyalty to unbelievers is not a Muslim trait. As Yohanan Ramati has remarked, Muslim pragmatism "prescribes that when dealing with fools, one milks them for all one can get."

The subsequent portrayal in the Western media of Muslims as innocent martyrs in the cause of multicultural tolerance concealed the fact that the Bosnian war was primarily religious in nature. "The small jihad is now finished ... but now we have to fight a bigger, second jihad," Mustafa Ceric, the Reis-ul-Ulema (supreme Muslim cleric) of Bosnia-Herzegovina declared when the November 1995 Dayton Accords were signed. They specifically called for the expulsion of all foreign fighters, but the Muslim-controlled Sarajevo government circumvented the rule by granting Bosnian citizenship and passports to unknown numbers of mujahideen. The result was over a dozen executed or planned outrages -- from a shootout in Lille to a terrorist cell in Montreal, from the planned attack on Los Angeles International Airport to a series of explosions in Morocco and Istanbul in 2003. All were directly traced to the Bosnian connection.

That connection will not go away unless Western policies change. The first step for the Bush administration would be to scrutinize the activities of the high representative in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Paddy Ashdown of Great Britain. This failed social-democratic politician spent the Bosnian war acting as an advocate for the Muslim side, which he glorified as a paragon of multiethnic tolerance, and, to this day, he continues to deny the Muslim terrorist threat in his Balkan fiefdom. His behavior is reprehensible but not surprising. Politicians hate admitting that they have been wrong; in addition, Ashdown's acceptance of reality would make his current position untenable -- which must be a cause of some anxiety to a 50-something man with no alternative employment, no independent means, and no prospects.

Ashdown's motives in denying the Bosnian reality matter less than the consequences of his actions for the security of the Western world. Especially serious is his current effort to terminate the autonomous intelligence capability of the Serbian entity in Bosnia, Republika Srpska (RS), by integrating it with the secret service of the Muslim entity. Over the years, the RS security service has compiled a comprehensive database detailing the activities of Islamic terrorists and the identities of their sympathizers and active supporters in Bosnia-Herzegovina, including many high-ranking government officials. Forcing it into union with the Muslim security service would deny the Serb entity the capability to track terrorist-related activities and would help the Muslim side to cover up its involvement with terrorists.

Ashdown's deputy and enthusiastic assistant in the piecemeal liquidation of the Republika Srpska is American diplomat Donald Hays, a Democrat who owed his rise to the Clinton administration -- specifically, to Richard Holbrooke. In October 2003, Hays escorted his former boss Holbrooke around Bosnia, reportedly introducing him as "the next U.S. Secretary of State." According to a report by the International Strategic Studies Association, Hays' motive for attempting to suppress the links between the Islamic establishment in Sarajevo and radical Muslims is partly domestic. He wants to avoid the embarrassment of having the Clinton administration's links to the terrorists in Bosnia and Kosovo brought to light in an election year (4). ...

Recalling Hays and demanding Ashdown's replacement would be a cost-free exercise in prudence by the Bush administration and a long-overdue major step toward countering the terrorist threat in the Balkans. To make that step meaningful, however, it would be necessary to understand the nature of past errors. A generation ago, it was understandable, even excusable, for policymakers in Washington to try to use Muslims in their fight against communism in just the way their predecessors tried to use the Church in Italy in the early 1950's. By now, however, it should be evident that appeasement only breeds the contempt and arrogance of the radicals and fuels their ambition. The West is in a war of religion, whether she wants that or not, and the enemy sees the Balkans as a battlefield (5).

On the Islamic side, this war is being fought in the belief that the West is on her last legs, demographically and culturally. Some leaders -- including President Bush -- may have been hoping to domesticate Islam under the aegis of the nondenominational deism that they profess. That will fail, and an "internal reform" of Islam will remain as elusive as ever. Any potential for internal reform is only undermined by the appeasement of radical Islam in the Balkans. It enhances a downward spiral of hate and spite and breeds more terrorism.

Western policy in the Balkans should be reappraised, because to continue encouraging the Muslim sense of pure victimhood is to feed would-be-suicide bombers with a political pap that nourishes their hate. If the War on Terror is to be meaningful, that appeasement must stop. Pandering to Islam's geopolitical designs -- in the Balkans or anywhere else -- and sacrificing smaller Christian nations in the process is not only bad, it is counterproductive: The morsels only whet the extremists' appetite, paving the way to a major global confrontation well before this century is over.

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MIM: In 1981 Mustafa Ceric became the Imam of the ICC in Chicago and received his doctorate in Islamic studies fromt he University of Chicago in 1986 .This webpage about the Bosnian American Cultural Association details their fundraising activities on behalf of Muslims in Bosnia and show that Ceric has longstanding ties to the United States.

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&c2coff=1&q=mustafa+ceric+muslim+aid+&btnG=Search

BOSNIAN-AMERICAN CULTURAL ASSOCIATION,INC.
1810 N. Pfingsten Road,
Northbrook, IL 60062
Tel. (847)272-0319
Fax : (847)272-0348

In the name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful!

The Bosnian-American Cultural Association, Inc. (BACA) has a long and rich history in the Chicago Metropolitan area as a center for the Muslims from Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Balkans, and other areas, who came mostly as immigrants to the USA. This is the most important and the most prominent organization of Bosnian Muslims, not only in the Chicago area, but in the entire USA. The principal BACA headquarters are located at 1810 N. Pfingsten Road, Northbrook, IL. BACA holds the sole beneficial ownership of that land, its structures and its facilities.


The first Muslim immigrants from Bosnia and Herzegovina, known as BOSNIACS, or simply Bosnians, came to the USA, mostly to Chicago, in 1903 in search of greater economic opportunities and greater freedom. They were young, single and of limited education, but willing to accept the hardest jobs. The first newcomers were greeted by local boys with showers of stones and catcalls of "damned Turks," because many of them wore their native hats, called "fezzes". But being quick learners they adjusted their clothing and behavior very quickly to the new country. Already, on May 1, 1906, they founded the first Bosnian fraternal organization in the USA, under the name of Dzemijetul Hajrije of Illinois (The Benevolent Society), which was later registered by the Secretary of State on July 9, 1906. This is the oldest existing Muslim organization in the USA. Its original charter has been appropriately treasured in the BACA/ICC Museum. Its members organized chapters in other states and purchased cemetery lots. Their purpose was to provide mutual help to their members, especially to pay hospital bills, to make Muslim funeral arrangements, to organize celebrations of Muslim religious holidays and to help preserve their religious and national customs and traditions. Their meeting places were mostly Bosnian coffee houses which they frequented to talk and joke in Bosnian, to eat Bosnian ethnic dishes and to exchange job referrals with each other. They contributed to the growth of Chicago as construction crews working mostly on downtown buildings, railroads, roads, and in the mining and steel industries. They became renowned builders after they completed several difficult projects in the Chicago subway system. After World War II, the second wave of Bosnian immigrants arrived in the USA, mostly in Chicago. The old timers had some temporary or visiting Imams (religious ministers) to serve their needs, but with the arrival of new immigrants a need for a well qualified and permanent Imam became more urgent. They invited and sponsored Sheik Kamil Avdich, a well known Bosnian Muslim scholar who had earned the Alimya with Royal Decree from the Al-Azhar University in Cairo, Egypt, but who refused to return to communist Yugoslavia.

Imam Kamil arrived in February 1954 and on May 3, 1954, he and other Bosnians founded a new organization, the "Muslim Religious and Cultural Home", which was later registered on March 14, 1955, with Imam Kamil Avdich as its first president and Safet Sarich, who was from the first generation of Bosnians born and educated in the U.S., as its first secretary. Cadi Seid ef. Karic, a very prominent Bosnian, was Imam Kamil's first assistant. They collected donations from Bosnians and on August 15, 1956 they purchased two buildings at 1800 N. Halsted, Chicago, IL., for $36,000. With the volunteer work of their enthusiastic members they remodeled a large hall in the larger building into the first mosque, which opened on February 10, 1957. This was the first Muslim institution in the Chicago area which served Bosnians and all other Muslims. It remained open for almost 20 years. On September 12, 1968, the name was changed to the Bosnian-American Cultural Association, abbreviated BACA, and Imam Kamil was again elected as its president. However, soon the building could no longer meet the needs of the growing BACA membership. On July 20, 1971, BACA purchased, for about $45,000, two-acres of vacant land at 1810 N. Pfingsten Road, Northbrook, IL. On December 2, 1972, the BACA Building Committee, decided to form a new corporation, the Islamic Cultural Center of Greater Chicago, Inc., abbreviated ICC. The ICC was incorporated on December 26, 1972. Imam Kamil was elected as its first president.


BACA has continued its activities both as a separate corporation and in partnership with its offspring, the ICC. To give assurances to the non-Bosnian Muslims, BACA entered into the TRUST (WAQF) AGREEMENT with the ICC, dated March 1, 1975, retaining the beneficial ownership and power to control the trust but granting the ICC the right to manage said trust property providing that it would be managed by a nine member Board of Directors, four to be elected by BACA, four to be elected by ICC and the ninth member to be selected from the Turkish community. The first phase of the ICC, consisting of educational, social and administrative sections, with a custodian's apartment, was completed at the cost of about $650,000, and opening ceremonies were held on March 21, 1976. Shortly after the completion of the first phase, Imam Kamil resigned as the president of the ICC and was appointed by the ICC Board of Directors as Administrative Director and Imam of the ICC. On April 2, 1977, the new ICC By-laws, which incorporated the required portions of the Trust (WAQF) Agreement, were approved by the ICC members. The founder and the great leader Imam Kamil Avdich passed away on December 2, 1979. Imam Kamil departed from this temporary dwelling to a better abode in which Almighty God will richly reward him. He was missed very much by the BACA and ICC members. One of the requirements of the Trust Agreement was that an ICC Imam shall be proficient in the Arabic, Bosnian and English languages.

After a search, Mustafa Ceric from Bosnia, a graduate from Al-Azhar University, was selected as the new Imam. He arrived in May 1981 from Bosnia and was appointed by the ICC Board as the full time ICC Imam. Dr. Mustafa Ceric received his Ph.D. in Islamic Studies from the University of Chicago in 1986. After very successfully serving BACA and ICC for over five years, he returned to Bosnia where he became a great religious leader of Bosnian Muslims during the 1992-1995 war and aggression on Bosnia and was elected as their spiritual head with the title of Reisu-l-ulema of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The second phase of the ICC was completed with a prayer hall, minaret and a lecture hall, at the cost of about $800,000. The opening was held on October 15, 1988. Both BACA and ICC, experienced some internal problems in the period from 1988 until 1991, but they overcame them and came out stronger and more united. The BACA and ICC Board of Directors have learned to cooperate with each other very closely as is required by the Trust (Waqf) Agreement.


Prior to the aggression on Bosnia and Herzegovina, only several hundred Bosnians resided in the Chicago Metropolitan area and perhaps just as many in the rest of the USA. After the war and terrible aggression was unleashed on Bosnia and Herzegovina by its neighbors, BACA mobilized all available resources to help Bosnians in Bosnia to survive the aggression and genocide. BACA organized, collected and forwarded humanitarian aid to Bosnia and Herzegovina, mostly food, clothing, medicine and medical supplies in nineteen containers. Sixteen of these containers were 40 feet long and 8 feet in diameter.



The value of BACA humanitarian aid and cash sent to Bosnia and Herzegovina exceeded $2,000.000 for the period from 1992 through 1995. During the last decade of the 20-th century, the Chicago area experienced a great influx of Bosnian refugees, estimated to exceed 30,000 (with over 200,000 in the USA), who were mostly expelled by their Serbian and Croatian neighbors. As a result, both BACA and ICC, have received substantial increases in their respective memberships. Consequently, the existing building and parking lot areas have become inadequate to accommodate these increases. There is an apparent need to acquire one or more additional buildings for the religious, cultural and social needs of the increasing number of Bosnian refugees in the Chicago area. BACA shall always promote the interests of all Bosniacs and shall continue to help them to preserve their religion and traditions. BACA shall continue, inshallah, to work hard for the benefits of all Muslims and all Americans.
BT


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http://www.islamonline.net/livedialogue/english/Guestcv.asp?hGuestID=z3o6bY

Biography of Mustafa Ceric


DATE OF BIRTH: February 5, 1952
PLACE OF BIRTH: Visoko, Bosnia
MARITAL STATUS: Married, with three children

LANGUAGES:
Bosnian, Arabic, English
Knowledge of Turkish, German and French

EDUCATION:

· Comprehensive School in Veliko Cajno, Visoko, Bosnia-Herzegovina (Grammar School)
· Gazi Husrevbegova Medresa of Sarajevo, 1974 (Islamic High School)
· University of Azhar, Cairo (Faculty of Arabic Language and Literature) Graduation, 1978 (B.M.)
· University of Chicago, Ph. D., June 1987. Dissertation: A Study of the Theology of Abu Mansur al-Maturidi (ca. 235/850-333/944). Mentor Fazlur Rahman.

WORK EXPERIENCE:

· Imam
Islamic Cultural Center, Northbrook, Chicago, 1981
· Lecturer
American Islamic College, Chicago, 1985
· Grand Imam
Islamic Center of Zagreb, 1986
· Lecturer
Faculty of Islamic Theology, Sarajevo, 1987
· Editor
Islamic Symposium of Islamic Center of Zagreb, 1988
· Associate Professor
International Institute of Islamic Thought and Civilization, Kuala Lumpur, 1991
· Full Professor
International Institute of Islamic Thought and Civilization, Kuala Lumpur, 1992
· Raisu-l-ulama (The Supreme Head)
of the Islamic Community in Bosnia-Herzegovina (the Highest Post for Islamic Affairs); Elected on April 28, 1993

PUBLICATIONS IN ENGLISH:

· Roots of Synthetic Theology in Islam: A Study of the Theology of Abu Mansur al-Maturidi (ca. 235/850-333/944), ISTAC, KUALA LUMPUR, 1995
· "A Choice Between War and Peace", New Sunday Times, January 5, 1992, Kuala Lumpur

PUBLICATIONS IN BOSNIAN:

· "Ljudsko pona?anje izme?u teorije i prakse" (Human Behavior in Theory and Practice), Preporod, 1987
· "El-Maturidi, zivot i djelo" (al-Maturidi: Life and Works), Glasnik, 1987
· "Islamska teologija" (Islamic Theology) Opca enciklopedija Jugoslovenskog leksikografskog zavoda >Miroslav Krleza< -Dopunsko izdanje A-Z, Zagreb, 1988
· "Prenetalna medicina i humana genetika" (Prenatal Medicine And Human Genetics), Preporod, 1988
· "Medicina i islam" (Medicine and Islam), Preporod, 1988
· "Islamski koncept zivota" (Islamic Concept of Life), Preporod, 1988
· "Ljudski zivot" (Human Life), Preporod, 1988
· "Kontracepcija, sterilizacija i abortus" (Contraception, Sterilization and Aborts), Preporod, 1988
· "Refleksije o porijeklu i razvoju sufizma" (Reflections on the Origin and Development of Sufism), Zbornik radova prvog simpozija Zagrebacke dzamije 1408/1988, Published 1989
· "Zivot, zdravlje i bolest nerodenog djeteta" (Islamski stav) (Life, Health and Disease of Unborn Child (Islamic View)), Anali, Opca bolnica >Dr. Josip Kalfe?<<, Zagreb, 1989
· "Suvremena duhovna kretanja u islamskom svijetu" (Contemporary Spiritual Movements in Islamic World) Zbornik radova drugog simpozija Zagrebacke dzamije 1409/1989, Published 1990
· "Ebu Mensur el-Maturidi: glavna djela o fikhu, tefsiru i kelamu" (Abu Mansur al Maturidi: Main Works on Fiqh, Tafsir and Kalam), Zbornik radova 3, Islamski teolo?ki fakultet u Sarajevu, 1990
· "Autoritet u Islamu" (Authority in Islam), Preporod, 1990
· "Islam izme?u religije i nacije" (Islam Between Religion and Nationality), Glasnik, 1991

INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCES
AND LECTURES:

· "Palestine and Justice: the Next Phase", Forth Annual Commemoration for the Victims of the Sabra-Shatila Massacres, September 16-18, 1982; Palestine Human Rights Campaign: National Conference, Chicago, September 19-20, 1986,
· "International Educational Conference on Muslim educational System: Goals and Orientation", Aligarh Muslim University Alumni Association of Greater Chicago and Muslim Community Center, Chicago, October 22, 1988.
· "Current Issues in the Islamic World", Wabash College Religion Department, Crawfordsville, Indianapolis, March 27, 1990
· "Muslim Unity in the unity of Islamic Belief of Tawhid", al-Durus al-Hasaniyyah Held During the Month of Ramadan at the Palace and in the Presence of His Majesty King Hasan II, the King of Marocco, Ramadan, 1411/1991
· "Muslims in Yugoslavia: Present and Future", King Faisal Center for Islamic Research and Studies, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, March 16, 1992
· "Islamic is mercy (Rahmah) to Mankind", The 2nd International Seminar on al-Qur'an at Dewan Muktamar, Pusat Islam Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur, February 27-28, 1992
· The Millennium World Peace Summit of Religious and Spiritual Leaders, United Nations, New York, August 28, 2000
· World Economic Forum, Davos, Switzerland, 28-31 January 2001

DIPLOMATIC ACTIVITIES:

· A member of the Bosnian official presidential delegation to Saudi Arabia that held talks with His Majesty King Fahd ibn Abdul Aziz in March, 1992
· A member of the Bosnian official presidential delegation to the Islamic Republic of Iran that held talks with his Excellency President Rafsanjani in October, 1992
· Special Representative of the President of the Republic of Bosnia-Herzegovina Mr. Alija Izetbegovic in Malaysia, in 1992
· Official Representative of the Government of the Republic of Bosnia-Herzegovina, in Malaysia, from May 13, 1992
· As the Supreme Head have represented the Islamic Community and Muslims of Bosnia-Herzegovina all over the world, since 1993

MEMBERSHIPS:

· European Council for Fatwa and Research, Dublin;
· Board of Trustees, International Islamic University, Islamabad;
· Inter-religious Council of Bosnia- Herzegovina, Sarajevo;
· Executive Board of the Foundation for Srebrenica/Potocari Memorial and Cemetery, Sarajevo
· Honorary President of the WCRP International, New York
· Comoderator of the WCRP European Religious Leaders Council, Paris

-------------------------

MIM: The humanitarian aid which was being sent to Bosnia in the 1990's often went to help the Mujahadeen. Many of the Bosnian 'charity' organisations were actually funding fronts for Al Qaeda.

This biography of the Bosnian president Izetbekovic was written by former CAIR communications director Ismail Royer. Royer is currently in prison after being convicted of planning to wage Jihad against the United States. In the 1990's Royer had went to Bosnia where joined the Jihad against Americans and Europeans. I views was the website started by Royer.

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http://www.youngmuslimscanada.org/biographies/display.asp?ID=2

Alija Izetbegovic

Copyright: http://www.iviews.com
Published Wednesday June 14, 2000

By Ismail Royer

"Our goal: the Islamization of Muslims. Our methods: to believe and to struggle."—Alija Izetbegovic, "Islamic Declaration," 1970

"O' Alija, O' honored! You drive America crazy!" –Line from Arabic poetry sung by foreign mujahideen during Bosnian war

Last week, Alija Izetbegovic announced his decision to step down as president of Bosnia. The man Bosnians affectionately call "Deedo," or Grandpa, will leave office in October. In a speech announcing his resignation, Izetbegovic cited health problems as the main reason for his decision—but tellingly, he added, "The international community is pushing things forward in Bosnia...but it is doing it at expense of the Muslim people. I feel it as an injustice," he said. "These are the things that I cannot live with."

Izetbegovic's resignation is an event upon which Muslims around the world should reflect. He is one of the few Muslim political leaders of our time who demonstrates real love for Islam, and his career contains lessons in the way the West views Muslims in Europe and deals with Islamic movements in power.

"Do we want the Muslim people to leave their going-around-in-circles, their dependence, backwardness, and poverty?" Izetbegovic once wrote, "Then we show clearly which path will take us to that goal: establishing Islam in every field in the personal life of the individual, in family and society…and the establishment of a unique Islamic community from Morocco to Indonesia."

For Izetbegovic, these were not just words; they were a plan of action that he acted upon his entire life.

In 1940, at the age of 16 he co-founded the Young Muslims, a religious and political group modeled on Egypt's Ikhwan al-Muslimeen. Six years later he and his friend Nedzib Sacirbey were jailed by the communist government of Yugoslavia for helping publish the journal "Mujahid." After their release, the Communists again cracked down on the young Muslims and in 1949 sentenced four members to death and jailed many more for their Islamic activism. In 1983 Izetbegovic was arrested again for disseminating "Islamic propaganda" and sentenced to 14 years in prison and was released in 1988.

It would seem unthinkable that such a man would ever become president of a European country. But in 1990, Izetbegovic was elected president of Bosnia and Herzegovina on the eve of that country's descent into a David-and-Goliath war with Yugoslavia and Croatia. Instead of packing up his family and fleeing his country as it was overrun, as the leaders of one Persian Gulf nation recently did, he stayed to lead his people throughout the war from his sandbagged office and his modest apartment. In doing so, he became for the world the face of the Bosnian people's struggle for survival in the face of genocide.

Izetbegovic led an army that managed to beat back vastly superior Croatian and Serbian forces. But he leaves another crucial legacy: for Bosnians, he took the shame out of being a Muslim. In Yugoslavia, regular visits to the mosque meant being snubbed for jobs in the Communist Party-controlled economy. Islam was demonized in history books, and practicing Muslim students could expect vastly lower grades regardless of how much they studied. Even the Arabic and Turkish words and expressions that enrich the Bosnian language were systematically removed and derided as "uncultured."

But "Alija Izetbegovic succeeded in organizing Muslims as a nation in Bosnia," Dr. Zuhdija Adilovic, a professor at the Islamic Pedagogic Academy in Zenica, told iviews.com in an interview. "This was the first time that Muslims had come to power in Bosnia."

With that power, the president embarked on a policy of reaffirmation of Bosnians' cultural identity. Today, children study their religion in public schools. Government employees, businessmen, soldiers, and university students can openly practice Islam with a sense of dignity. A worshipper in one of Sarajevo's packed mosques today might find a street sweeper praying on his left side and the city's mayor praying on his right.

Izetbegovic's unapologetic approach to his religion and his political power made the West uneasy. Amid warnings of a "fundamentalists Islamic state" in Europe, America and the EU stood by for three years facilitating the genocide of the Bosnian Muslim people. In 1995, when Islamic brigades of the Bosnian army launched a massive assault on Serb forces and seized thirty percent of Serb-controlled territory in a few days, it dawned on the West that Muslims might actually be victorious. America and Europe suddenly demanded peace.

A "peace plan" drawn up and imposed by the United States and enforced by NATO military occupation rewarded Serbs with their own state on half of Bosnia's territory, while Croats received another twenty-five percent. The US plan left Muslims, which make up approximately half of Bosnia's population, quarantined and landlocked on one quarter of their country.

The US peace plan imposed a system of government on Bosnia that guarantees perpetual economic and political stagnation and weakens Muslim political power. Serbs, Muslims, and Croats each have an equal voice in a three-member "presidency" in Bosnia, even though Muslims make up the majority of the population. If the country were a "real" democracy, with each citizen having an equal voice, Bosnia would be virtually guaranteed Muslim leadership by virtue of demographic. And under the current system, the government only takes action by consensus. With Serbs and Croats determined to undermine Muslims at every step, consensus never occurs, and in practice, the real power in Bosnia is wielded by the European Union.

Iviews.com asked Nedzib Sacirbey, Bosnia's ambassador-at-large and Izetbegovic's friend and cellmate from his youth, what Izetbegovic meant when he said, "the international community is pushing things forward in Bosnia...at expense of the Muslim people."

"The number one obstacle is that the international community did not use its power to return refugees, which would create a multi-ethnic society," Sacirbey said. "And for example, in Banja Luka, the Serbs leveled all mosques, but now 5 years after the war, there is still no permission to build one single mosque. It is the same in Croatian part."

The European Union's failure to return Muslim refugees to their homes in occupied areas of Bosnia enforces the war's ethnic cleansing. Meanwhile, for the most part, Serbs and Croats travel to and live in Muslim areas freely. On a recent trip to Mostar, a city divided in half with Muslim and Croat areas, iviews.com spoke to residents on both sides of the fault-line. Asked whether she would feel afraid to travel to the Muslim side, a Croat woman said, "No, I go there all the time to shop and visit my daughter." On the other hand, several Croats said they did not want Muslims on their side, and many Muslims said they faced harassment and threats of violence whenever they crossed the river separating the two communities.

The United States and the EU do, however, use their power to actively undermine Izetbegovic and his Party for Democratic Action (SDA) and to promote the former Communist Party of Bosnia, which was renamed the Social Democrat Party (SDP). Fed up with a lack of economic progress, a large number of Bosnian Muslim voters shifted support to the neo-communists in the most recent elections. The fact that the US State Department provided SDP with crucial logistic support for its campaigns didn't hurt either.

At the same time, Wolfgang Petritsch, the head of the European Union's civil authority in Bosnia, urged voters to dump "the leaders from the war," of which Izetbegovic is the only one remaining. And the EU ran advertisements on the television network it operates urging viewers to vote for "change"—in other words, change the leadership of the communist opposition.

With characteristic doublespeak, the, US State Department describes the result of its efforts as a victory for "political pluralism…at the expense of the ruling national parties." Sacirbey, as would most rational observers, calls it interference in the democratic process. "We expect them to say, 'Use your voting rights, vote for the best candidate,' not, 'Vote for or against so and so'," said Sacirbey.

Muslims have plenty to worry about with regard to the SDP. At an outdoor rally in Tuzla two months ago, SDP members feasted on barbecued pork chops to demonstrate their "secularism." They have announced their intention to rename the main road in the Muslim stronghold of Zenica, after Yugoslavia's communist dictator. Additionally, a group of party activists reportedly hurled stones at a mosque recently.

So many of the problems of the Islamic world that we typically blame on others are fundamentally the fault of Muslims, but not so in Bosnia. In the face of this internationally organized quagmire designed to paralyze and underdevelop Muslim progress in Bosnia, Alija Izetbegovic decided he didn't have the strength to continue. "Somebody must come who can deal with such problems," he said.

The tragedy of Bosnia is not only that 350,000 men, women, and children died because their neighbors hated them for their religion, or that thousands of women were raped, or that hundreds of mosques were razed. What does it say about our civilization, that politicians in Europe and America had the power to intervene, but chose not to? It suggests not only that for the West, the lives of Muslims are not worth the trouble. The failure to stop the ethnic cleansing of Bosnian Muslims, along with the behavior of the West in post-war Bosnia, suggests that genocide will be tolerated for the sake of a political goal; in this case, the prevention of a European Muslim state. The lesson for Muslims deluded by our era's lofty talk of "democracy" is that for America and Europe, the stated goal of "promoting democracy" will be overridden by their pathological fear of Islam.

But in the face of the tragedy of genocide and betrayal by the West, Izetbegovic triumphed. He led Bosnia to freedom from Yugoslavia as an independent, sovereign state. He raised an army to defend his people. He led the renaissance of Islam in Bosnia, while protecting the rights of Christians in the areas under his control. For this, we should thank him, and wish him well.

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