<http://worldpoliticswatch.com/images/CommentaryNews/bosnia.jpg> 

Wahhabi Rules: Islamic Extremism Comes to Bosnia 

Boris Kanzleiter | 02 May 2007 
World Politics Watch <http://www.worldpoliticswatch.com/>
http://worldpoliticswatch.com/article.aspx?id=747 

It was a strange scene. Over 3000 followers of the radical Wahhabi current
of Islam had come to the northeast Bosnian town of Tuzla to bury their
leader Jusuf Barcic, who had recently died in a traffic accident. The coffin
in front of the mosque was draped in a green cloth. Men with long beards
chanted "Allahu Akbar": "God is great." As press photographers tried to
photograph the scene, they were first cursed and then beaten. The police did
nothing. "We did not expect there to be so many people," an officer told the
newspaper Oslobodjenje.

Religious fundamentalism is on the rise in Bosnia-Herzegovina. There had not
previously been any mass demonstration of this size. But the local media
have for some time now noted a marked increase in the activities of the
Wahhabi sect, which counts al-Qaida founder Osama Bin Laden among its
adherents. Barcic's funeral in Tuzla on March 31 was yet another sign that
Wahhabism in Bosnia had ceased to be a marginal phenomenon. According to
Resid Hafizovic, a Professor at the Faculty of Islamic Studies in Sarajevo,
the sect represents a "potentially deadly virus" for Bosnian Muslims.



An episode in February caused a particular stir. Jusuf Barcic and a group of
his followers wanted to enter the venerable Careva mosque in downtown
Sarajevo, in order to perform the Wahhabi prayer rites. For the first time
in the over 500 year history of the mosque, the Imam had to lock the doors.
Only the arrival of the police could prevent clashes between Barcic's
followers and followers of the indigenous Bosnian form of Islam. Already
last year, there had been a massive brawl in the town of Kalesija after the
Wahhabis occupied the local mosque there and chased off the Imam. 

Such incidents remain relatively isolated. But the Islamists are
increasingly brazen about their presence. In Sarajevo, for instance, one
sees more and more people who respect the fundamentalists' prescripts: men
with shaved heads and long beards wearing shin-length pants and women
covered from head to foot in long black robes. Wahhabi "vice squads" have
already been known sometimes to beat young couples whose public displays of
affection violate the Wahhabis' strict moral code. According to a recent
survey conducted by Prism Research, nearly 70 percent of the two million
Bosnian Muslims reject Wahhabi doctrine. Thirteen percent, however,
subscribe to it.

Who are the Wahhabis? Wahhabi doctrine requires the most literal possible
application of the teachings of the Quran. Wahhabis are for the introduction
of the Sharia and the establishment of a theocratic regime. Music,
television and all forms of worldly pleasure are regarded as "decadent." The
movement dates to the 18th century preacher Muhammed ibn Abd al-Wahhab, who
formulated puritanical principles for the "purification" of Islam, and its
center is to be found in Saudi Arabia, where the monarchy has established
Wahhabism as the official state religion. Wahhabi influence is particularly
strong among Islamists in Chechnya and the Taliban in Afghanistan.

In Bosnia, the success of the Wahhabis' puritanical form of Islam is often
explained by the desolate conditions in the country. "Many of the Wahhabis
come from rural areas and the most disadvantaged sections of the population.
These people are desperate," a former adherent told Nidzara Ahmetasevic of
The Balkan Investigative Reporting Network. Large parts of Bosnia were
devastated during the Bosnian War from 1992 to 1995. Over 100,000 people
were killed in the fighting between Serbs, Croats, and Muslims: According to
the Sarajevo-based Research and Documentation Center, two-thirds were
Muslims. International intervention put an end to the conflict. But the
political situation remains tense to this day and the economic situation is
difficult.

In fact, however, the problem is more complex. Although the majority of
Bosnian Muslims are secular in orientation, there have always been
fundamentalist currents with political influence among the Bosnian
intelligentsia. Alija Izetbegovic, the first Bosnian President following the
1992 declaration of Bosnian independence, is a case in point. Izetbegovic
openly expressed sympathy for Islamist doctrine, even if he did not adopt it
as the basis for his policies. He brought thousands of Arab Mujahideen to
Bosnia to reinforce his troops, many of them veterans of the war in
Afghanistan. "We enjoyed great privileges among both the political and the
military leadership in Sarajevo," Ali Hamad, a former Mujahideen commander
from Bahrain, recently told the German weekly Der Spiegel.

The fact that Bosnia has become such a fertile source of new recruits for
the Wahhabi sectarians is a legacy of this alliance. Having obtained Bosnian
passports, several hundred Mujahideen remained in Bosnia after the war. With
the generous financial support of Saudi Arabia, they built up a network of
organizations that they are using to attract the next generation of
Islamists.

The attitude of the Bosnian-Muslim leadership has remained ambivalent. On
the one hand, it is under pressure from the United States. Whereas the
United States quietly supported the import of Mujahideen to Bosnia in the
early 1990s, since the 9/11 attacks it has been pushing for the destruction
of the local Islamist scene as part of the broader war on global Jihadist
networks. In 2002, the Bosnian government turned over six Algerian-born
Wahhabis with Bosnian passports to U.S. authorities. The six were sent to
the Guantánamo prison camp. Since then, there have been regular arrests.

On the other hand, the Islamists continue to have a direct line to persons
in the leadership. According to former holy warrior Ali Hamad, "There are
people in the current Bosnian leadership who very much welcomed our arrival
in the country back then." In the meanwhile, former Wahhabis who have left
the sect have founded a non-governmental organization that is sounding the
alarm. "The problem was ignored for more than 10 years," Jasmin Merdan of
the Sarajevo-based Center for the Prevention of Terrorism notes, "The not
exactly enviable situation in which we find ourselves now is the result."

Boris Kanzleiter is a Belgrade-based journalist and doctoral candidate at
the East European Institute of the Free University Berlin. This article
first appeared in German in the April 11 edition of the Berlin-based weekly
Jungle World <http://jungle-world.com/index.php>
<http://jungle-world.com/index.php> . (Jungle World -- whose title is a
bilingual play on words -- was founded in 1997 following an acrimonious
split from the weekly Junge Welt [Young World].) The English translation is
by John Rosenthal.


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