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Bosnia deports first ex-fighter
SARAJEVO—Bosnia has deported the first of dozens of Muslim former
fighters identified as threats to security after investigations
requested by the United States, a newspaper reported on Friday.
Algerian-born Atau Mimun, 37, was among hundreds of foreign volunteers
who arrived in Bosnia during the 1992-95 war to fight alongside Bosnian
Muslims against Bosnian Serbs and Bosnian Croats, and stayed on after
marrying local women.
He was deported to Algeria on Sunday, the Nezavisne Novine daily quoted
a senior security official as saying.
“It was established that this person jeopardized national security,”
said Dragan Mektic, the director of the foreign affairs service within
the state security ministry. “We believe he is linked with people who
have been under surveillance in connection with terrorist activities,”
he told the newspaper. Neither security officials nor any representative
of Mimun were immediately available to comment. Washington asked
Sarajevo to deport all foreign-born ex-fighters in the late 1990s, after
the Bosnian government closed what it said was a training camp for
terrorists. It repeated the request after the September 11 2001 attacks
against the United States. Most left Bosnia after that and those who
remained have been under close scrutiny. Over the past 18 months, a
government commission revoked around 500 citizenships out of 1,300
awarded to foreigners from a wide range of countries during and after
the war.
Most are expected to appeal and may be allowed to remain. Dozens,
however, are set to be deported because the government has said they
represent threats to national security. Complicated legal procedures had
delayed the deportations but Bosnia’s parliament has been discussing a
new anti-terrorist law to simplify the process. Mektic said nobody else
would be deported for the moment because conditions have not been
fulfilled.
“They are only waiting for this law to speed up the deportations,”
Syrian-born Imad Al Husayn, who has also been called a threat to
national security and who is now waiting for a court ruling on his
appeal, told Reuters on Friday.—Agencies
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