Bosnia charges ex-fighter with war crimes

Bosnia charges ex-fighter with war crimes
Police officers stand guard in Banja Luka, in this May 7, 2016 photo. (AFP)
Updated 20 May 2016
Follow

Bosnia charges ex-fighter with war crimes

Bosnia charges ex-fighter with war crimes

SARAJEVO: Bosnian prosecutors on Friday charged a former fighter of Egyptian origin with war crimes allegedly committed while fighting alongside the country’s Muslims during the 1990s conflict.
Mirsad Hodzic, who obtained Bosnian citizenship, was a member of the notorious El Mujaheed unit of foreign volunteers during the 1992-1995 war, which was known for atrocities and criminal activities. At the time, he was known as Abdallah Hany.
The 46-year-old was indicted for involvement in taking at least five ethnic Croat civilians hostage in October 1993 with the aim of exchanging them for detained members of his unit, a prosecutors’ statement said.
Specifically, Hodzic was charged over his role in abducting two people from their apartment in the central town of Travnik.
The hostages were held at the unit’s training camp in Orasac near Travnik, where they were tortured and beaten.
The suspect, who lives in the Travnik area, has not yet been arrested but has been questioned, a spokesman for the prosecution said.
Although allies against ethnic Serbs during most of the 1992-1995 war, Bosnia’s Muslims and Croats fought against each other in 1992 and 1993.
Bosnia’s inter-ethnic war attracted hundreds of fighters from across the world to join forces in the fighting.
Most of the foreign fighters left when the war ended. But some stayed and obtained Bosnian citizenship, mostly by marrying local women.
The 1992-1995 in the former Yugoslav republic claimed some 100,000 lives.