CIP Greetings for Blessed Days -- With
Special Thanks to the U.S. Government, December 16, 2006
Selamalejkum warahmetallahuh
wabarakatuh!
Bismillah ir-rahman ir-rahim!
The Center for Islamic Pluralism
expresses its sincere best wishes to the three global monotheistic
communities, which will all celebrate holy days in the current weeks.
First, blessings to Jewish believers for the observation of Hanukkah which
marks the miraculous liberation of the Hebrew temple from Hellenistic
domination; second, to Christians on the celebration of the birth of Jesus,
and to all Muslims everywhere, a blessed Eid al-Adha! Bajram
sherif mubarek olsun!
In addition, the news report below
embodies a great cause for gratitude among Muslims, thanks to the U.S.
authorities.
CIP correspondents in the U.S. are
notified that the excellent movie "Behind Enemy Lines," with Gene Hackman
and Owen Wilson, which truthfully portrays the reality of war in
Bosnia-Hercegovina, will be shown on the FX cable channel on Sunday,
December 17, and on Cinemax on Saturday, December 23.
Please repost.
Stephen Suleyman Schwartz
Executive Director
Center for Islamic Pluralism
26 Bosnian Serbs Arrested in U.S.
Ties to Srebrenica Massacre Alleged
By R. Jeffrey Smith
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, December 16, 2006; A03
A Justice Department dragnet based on war crimes probes in Europe led to
26 arrests in the past week of Bosnian Serbs who had obtained refugee
status in the United States by allegedly concealing their service in the
Bosnian Serb military during the bitter Yugoslav conflict of the
mid-1990s.
The arrests occurred in at least eight cities, including Denver and
Orlando. They reflect an intensified effort by Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE) to root out unacknowledged members of the Bosnian Serb
military using data supplied by the International Criminal Tribunal for
the former Yugoslavia, located in The Hague.
A former U.S. Army intelligence analyst who worked at The Hague from
1997 to 2001, Richard J. Butler, helped
instigate the U.S. effort when he prodded the agency to compare
immigration records with lists of Bosnian soldiers in units linked to
the 1995 massacre of 8,000 Muslims in the town of Srebrenica. The
killings are considered the worst European war crime of the past 50
years.
Butler was a key witness at the trials of Bosnian Serb officers involved
in the massacre before the Hague tribunal, where he spent three years
reconstructing events at Srebrenica from seized military documents,
combat reports, photos, videotapes, witness testimony and transcripts of
intercepted radio communications. He now works at the immigration office
in Atlanta.
In 2004, U.S. officials said, immigration agents in Massachusetts were
investigating Marko Boskic, a Bosnian Croat who served in a Serb
military unit at Srebrenica, when Butler offered them a list of soldiers
attached to other units deployed in or near the Bosnian town.
That list has since become fodder for a nationwide investigation
overseen by the immigration office's Human Rights Violators and Public
Safety Unit in Washington. Boskic has been convicted of immigration
fraud.
Those targeted are a small fraction of the more than 200,000 refugees
who came to the United States from the former Yugoslavia during the
1990s, mostly because of the Bosnian conflict. Previous immigration
roundups related to Srebrenica, in September 2005 and in June, netted 20
Bosnian Serbs in Phoenix and four Bosnian Serbs in Salt Lake City. Like
those arrested in the past week, they were charged with visa fraud,
perjury or making false statements.
Some of those recently arrested have been criminally charged and face
prison terms, while others have been put into administrative proceedings
that could lead to deportation. Most have families or jobs here. After
deportation to Bosnia, which is now independent and governed by an
ethnic coalition, they could face further investigation, detention and
prosecution by the country's indigenous war crimes chamber.
Only a few of those arrested here are accused by the Justice Department
of directly taking part in the Srebrenica killings, but all allegedly
were in units that did.
A government affidavit filed before the recent arrest of Nedjo Ikonic in
Greenfield, Wis., for example, alleges that he commanded a police
company that oversaw the evacuation of Bosnian Muslims from Srebrenica
as part of the planned massacre. It cites a report written by Butler,
witness statements and a police roster recovered by Hague investigators
from a headquarters building in Bosnia.
No one answered the telephone at Ikonic's residence yesterday.
Julie L. Myers, assistant secretary of homeland security for ICE, said
in a statement that her office "will not allow the United States to be a
safe haven for those who failed to disclose their service in military
forces that were known to commit atrocities."
An ICE official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said additional
investigations are underway of Bosnian Serb, Croat and Muslim immigrants
linked to atrocities but declined to provide details.