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Bosnian al-Qaeda terrorist to testify of Serb killing
January 14, 2009
Islamic terrorist Ali Hamad seeks a temporary asylum to Serbia and has expressed his willingness to testify at the Serbia’s war crimes court about atrocities his Bosnian El Mujaheed units have committed against Serbs during the Bosnian civil was in the 1990s.
“I have asked to be provided a departure to Serbia and a temporary life in it. For now, I am not seeking an asylum from Serbia,” said Ali Hamad whose Bosnian Jihad name is Abu Ubeyda after a fateful follower of Islam’s inventor Mohammed.
Born in Bahrain, Ali Hamad came to Bosnia in 1992 to join the Bosnian Muslim army in fighting a Jihad against Serbs and Croats, who are Christian.
In 1997 he was given a 12 year sentence by a Bosnian court for terrorist activities in the city of Mostar. While in jail, Hamad wrote a book In the Network of Evil. He was released from jail on December 31, 2008.
“Serbian prosecution for war crimes has an interest in granting him a visit because it is investigating war mujahedeen war crimes committed against Serbian civilians in central Bosnia,” said Ali Hamad’s lawyer Dusko Tomic.
Tomic said that Hamad wants to go to Serbia because he got a positive view of it after his contact with the Serbia’s prosecutor Vladimir Vukcevic.
Tomic said that he already held talks with the Serbian Prime Minister about Hamad’s asylum.
“We are interested in the testimony of Ali Hamad. If we were to come with evidence then the subject will be formed,” said Serbia’s chief prosecutor Bruno Vekaric.
Ali Hamad also testified at the trial of the Bosnian Muslim army General Rasim Delic where he described the court that al Qaeda was part of the Bosnian Muslim army.
Hamad first broke the silence on al-Qaeda presence in Bosnia when he told the German Spiegel that Osama bin Laden is sending his men to Bosnia not because he cares about Bosnian Muslims but in order to establish a base from which he can destroy the West.
After his release from the Bosnian jail, Hamad has been living in the Immigration Center in Bosnia and has said that he wants to go to Serbia because Bosnia is a “country that does not respect its own laws”.
January 14, 2009
SERBIANNA

January 14, 2009
Islamic terrorist Ali Hamad seeks a temporary asylum to Serbia and has expressed his willingness to testify at the Serbia’s war crimes court about atrocities his Bosnian El Mujaheed units have committed against Serbs during the Bosnian civil was in the 1990s.
“I have asked to be provided a departure to Serbia and a temporary life in it. For now, I am not seeking an asylum from Serbia,” said Ali Hamad whose Bosnian Jihad name is Abu Ubeyda after a fateful follower of Islam’s inventor Mohammed.
Born in Bahrain, Ali Hamad came to Bosnia in 1992 to join the Bosnian Muslim army in fighting a Jihad against Serbs and Croats, who are Christian.
In 1997 he was given a 12 year sentence by a Bosnian court for terrorist activities in the city of Mostar. While in jail, Hamad wrote a book In the Network of Evil. He was released from jail on December 31, 2008.
“Serbian prosecution for war crimes has an interest in granting him a visit because it is investigating war mujahedeen war crimes committed against Serbian civilians in central Bosnia,” said Ali Hamad’s lawyer Dusko Tomic.
Tomic said that Hamad wants to go to Serbia because he got a positive view of it after his contact with the Serbia’s prosecutor Vladimir Vukcevic.
Tomic said that he already held talks with the Serbian Prime Minister about Hamad’s asylum.
“We are interested in the testimony of Ali Hamad. If we were to come with evidence then the subject will be formed,” said Serbia’s chief prosecutor Bruno Vekaric.
Ali Hamad also testified at the trial of the Bosnian Muslim army General Rasim Delic where he described the court that al Qaeda was part of the Bosnian Muslim army.
Hamad first broke the silence on al-Qaeda presence in Bosnia when he told the German Spiegel that Osama bin Laden is sending his men to Bosnia not because he cares about Bosnian Muslims but in order to establish a base from which he can destroy the West.
After his release from the Bosnian jail, Hamad has been living in the Immigration Center in Bosnia and has said that he wants to go to Serbia because Bosnia is a “country that does not respect its own laws”.
January 14, 2009
SERBIANNA