http://www.slobodan-milosevic.org/news/srna063007.htm

Belgrade, 30 June: Former Al-Qa'idah officer Ali Hamad [as transcribed] 
has said that the Bosnia-Hercegovina state still protects members of 
Al-Qa'idah, adding that members of this terrorist organization are also 
to be found in Kosmet [Kosovo-Metohija] where they are supported by 
ethnic Albanians.

In an interview with [Belgrade-based] Glas javnosti, Hamad said that 
some of his former colleagues from Al-Qa'idah occasionally visit 
Bosnia-Hercegovina, adding that the state still protected them.

"I also have a dispute with this state, because I claim that they exist, 
but they try to deny it. Al-Qa'idah has its presence here, but I do not 
know exactly how many people it has. It is even present across Europe," 
Hamad said.

He said that Al-Qa'idah had established control over Europe via 
Bosnia-Hercegovina, assessing that Spain and Italy would soon suffer a 
terrorist attack similar to what had happened in the United States.

"These days, Al-Qa'idah believes it is attacked by the whole world. They 
may even do something here in Bosnia as an act of vengeance. Had 
Al-Qa'idah's people not sheltered and enjoyed protection here, they 
would have surely not had such a large number of people in Europe," 
Hamad said.

He said that, according to his knowledge, Al-Qa'idah, after Bosnia, had 
the largest number of its people in Kosmet where Albanians supported them.

"They especially hate the Serbs. In some FBI reports, it has been 
demonstrated that Al-Qa'idah has its people in Kosovo, and that domestic 
people from Kosovo are among them. I believe that [training] camps also 
exist, because where Al-Qa'idah plants its people, there must be camps, 
too," Hamad said.

Speaking about the murder of Serbs and other non-Muslims in 
Bosnia-Hercegovina, Hamad said that the mujahidin had used to kill using 
bullets, knives, strangling wires, chainsaws, axes, small knives, etc.

He cited an example of the murder of a Croat boy in Guca village near 
Travnik whose head had been cut off in front of his father. The father 
had to watch all this, and then he was himself killed along with 20 
other civilians from the village.

"This man cried, sought help, begged, and when he saw them cutting his 
son's neck he turned his head away, but he was forced to watch. They 
held him, opened his eyes and held him," Hamad said.

Hamad said that he would rather hang himself than stay to live in 
Zenica, adding that he must forget Bosnia. He also said that he was 
currently trying to find a place somewhere in the West via US 
authorities and the Hague tribunal.

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