http://www.b92.net/eng/news/society-article.php?yyyy=2007&mm=09&dd=08&nav_category=113&nav_id=43612

Mujaheedin begins testimony in Delić trial
8 September 2007 | 17:00 | Source: Reuters
*SARAJEVO -- A former al Qaeda member who led a group of Muslim 
volunteers in Bosnia's 1992-95 war testified Friday, Reuters says.

* Bahraini-born Ali Ahmed Ali Hamad told the Hague Tribunal war crimes 
prosecutors that his unit, accused of atrocities, was in close contact 
with the Bosnian Muslim army.

Hamad is key in the trial of Rasim Delić, the highest-ranking Bosnian 
Muslim army officer indicted by the Hague, the agency reported from 
Sarajevo.

He is accused of knowing that the foreign fighters killed, tortured and 
raped Croat and Serb soldiers and civilians, and of having failed to 
punish them.

Hundreds of volunteers, or Mujaheedin, came from North Africa and the 
Middle East to support the Bosnian Muslims in their fight against 
Bosnia's Serbs and Croats.

Hamad was in the El Mujaheed unit, which was notorious for wartime 
atrocities.

"We received orders only from our mujahideen chiefs but this does not 
mean that we acted on our own, rather in coordination with the Bosnian 
army, after our officers agreed," said Hamad, serving a 12-year prison 
sentence for his role in a car bombing.

Because of his prison term, the Hague court temporarily moved its seat 
to Sarajevo especially for the three-day hearing, which is due to 
conclude on Sunday.

Hamad said that upon his arrival in Bosnia in 1992 he was received by a 
Bosnian army officer who told him that foreign fighters were under his 
authority, gave him a uniform and guns and sent him to the field.

He said al Qaeda sent him to Bosnia.

"The relations between Bosniaks and mujahideen were very good," Hamad 
said in fluent Bosnian.

He illustrated this with the fact that the number of foreign fighters 
increased to about 1,500 in 1993, from less than 100 the year before.

Hamad says he fought with al Qaeda in Afghanistan in 1991-92.

Hamad confirmed that he had contacts with Bosnian Muslim army officers 
when commanding his unit in 1993.

He specifically mentioned General Mehmed Alagić, who was also indicted 
by the U.N. war crimes tribunal, but died before his trial ended.

Two other Muslim generals who were indicted along with him were found 
guilty.

Hamad was jailed in 1998 for his involvement in a car-bomb attack in 
Mostar, a town split between Croats and Muslims.

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