Posted by
Darko Trifunovic on Tuesday, March 25, 2008 5:45:46 AM
Bosnian in the network of Al Qaeda
Main individual Saudi sponsors of al-Qaida „Golden
Chan“
Then names find out during the FBI investigation in
Bosnia
Khalid bin Mahfouz,
banker
Saleh Abdullah Kamel,
banker
Abdullah Suleiman al
Rajhi, banker
Adel Abdul Jalil
Batterjee, businessman
Mohammed Hussein al
Amoudi, businessman
Wa’el Hamza Julaidan,
businessman
Yasin al Qadi,
businessman
AIY receiving on
regularly base donation from Saudi Arabia, Germany and Austria and as well from
other Muslim countries.
Main donator is Saudi
Arabia, and Saudi opened branch office of Saudi High Commission in Zenica.
AIO has direct connection with different Islamic
fundamentalist organization run by former mujahedeen members of El Mujahedeen
unit.
IGASA
DAR AL BER – UAR H.O.
Humanitarian
Association Dubai from UAE
KRC-Company djl
DAR AL BIR – UAR H.O.
World Islam H.O.
Sarajevo
Saudi High Commission
H.O.
Al Haramain Al Masjed
Al Aqsa
Banks, businesses
& charities
The Islamic banking
network, a deviated instrument of terror
Penetration of the
business sector
Charities as fronts
Official Saudi
Contribution to Terror and Terrorism
Saudi Committee for
Support of Palestinians al-Quds Intifada 1967
General Donation
Committee for Afghanistan 1980
High Committee for
Bosnia Herzegovina 1992
Joint Relief
Committee for Kosovo and Chechnya 1998
Al Furqan
Al Haramain
Al Khifah
Al Muwafag
BBI banka
Bedr-Bosna
BIO banka
Global relief
Fundation
Igassa
Taibah International
TWRA
Benuvalencia
International Fondation
Rabita
Taibah International (Bosnia)
U.S.
Designation Date: May 6, 2004
UN
Designation Date: May 11, 2004
Background: Taibah International in Bosnia
has significant ties to the Global Relief Foundation (GRF), which initially
operated in Bosnia under the auspices of Taibah. Up until 1996, Muhamed El
Nagmy, the registered leader of GRF, was also working with Ahmed Abdul Kerim as
joint leaders of Taibah International. By December 2001, El Nagmy, still listed
as the leader of GRF, was working in the Taibah office in Travnik.
Additionally, the acting director of Taibah in Bosnia, Ali Hamid El Tayeb,
again in December 2001, confirmed that El Nagmy was responsible for bringing
financial support to Taibah International while holding the position as the
Bosnia representative of GRF. A former employee of Taibah International was a
member of Ayadi Chafiq Bin Muhammad’s network, who was designated by the
Treasury Department on October 12, 2001.
AKAs: Taibah International Aid Agency
Taibah International Aid Association
Al Taibah, Intl.
Taibah International Aide Association
Al
Furqan
U.S.
Designation Date: May 6, 2004
UN
Designation Date: May 11, 2004
Background:
Information
shows this non-governmental organization was associated with al Qaida, having
close ties and sharing an office with the Global Relief Foundation (GRF), and
was chiefly sponsored by the Bosnian branch of the Al Haramain Islamic
Foundation, with whom it jointly conducted many activities in Bosnia.
Individuals working for Al Furqan have been involved in multiple instances of
suspicious activity, including surveillance of the U.S. Embassy and UN
buildings in Sarajevo. One former Al Furqan employee also has ties to the
Algerian Armed Islamic Group (GIA). Although Al Furqan ostensibly ceased
operations in 2002, two successor organizations, Sirat and Istikamet, continue
to act on behalf of Al Furqan in Bosnia.
AKAs: Dzemilijati Furkan Dzem’ijjetul
Furqan Association for Citizens Rights and Resistance to Lies Dzemijetul Furkan
Association of Citizens for the Support of Truth and Suppression of Lies Sirat
Association for Education Culture and Building Society-Sirat Association for Education
Cultural and to Create Society-Sirat Istikamet In Siratel
Al-Haramain
& Al Masjed Al-Aqsa Charity Foundation
U.S.
Designation Date: May 6, 2004
UN
Designation Date: June 28, 2004
Background: The Al-Haramain & Al Masjed
Al-Aqsa Charity Foundation (AHAMAA) has significant financial ties to the
Bosnia-based NGO Al Furqan, and al Qaida financier Wa’el Hamza Julaidan, who
was designated by the Treasury Department on September 6, 2002. Wa’el Hamza
Julaidan, a Saudi citizen, is a close associate of Usama bin Laden. Julaidan
fought with bin Laden in Afghanistan in the 1980s. Bin Laden himself
acknowledged his close ties to Julaidan during a 1999 interview with al-Jazeera
TV. As a member of the Board of Directors for AHAMAA, Julaidan opened three
bank accounts on behalf of the NGO between 1997 and 2001 and continued to have
authorization to handle two of their accounts as a signatory on two the NGO’s
Bosnian accounts.
AKAs:
Al
Haramain Al Masjed Al Aqsa Al Haramayn Al Masjid Al Aqsa Al-Haramayn and Al
Masjid Al Aqsa Charitable Foundation
Al Haramain Islamic
Foundation-related Designations:
Al
Haramain Islamic Foundation (general background information)
Afghanistan
Albania
Bangladesh
Bosnia
Comoros
Islands
Ethiopia
Indonesia
Kenya
The
Netherlands
Pakistan
Somalia
Tanzania
United
States
Al Haramain
Islamic Foundation
General Background: Al-Haramain Islamic Foundation (AHF) represents itself as a private,
charitable, and educational organization dedicated to promoting Islamic
teaching throughout the world. It is one of the principal Islamic
non-governmental organizations active throughout the world. Funding generally
comes from grants from other countries, individual Muslim benefactors, and
special campaigns, which selectively target Muslim-owned business entities
around the world as sources of donations.
There is evidence that field offices and
representatives operating throughout Africa, Asia and Europe have provided
financial and logistical support to the al Qaida network and other terrorist
organizations designated by the United
States, and, in some cases, included on the
UN 1267 Committee’s consolidated list of individuals/entities subject to
Security Council Sanctions. Some of these organizations include the Egyptian
Islamic Jihad (EIJ), Jemaah Islamiyah, Al-Ittihad Al-Islamiya (AIAI), Lashkar
E-Taibah, and HAMAS – all of which are designated terrorist organizations and
all of which have received funds from AHF, its branches, or local
intermediaries
Al
Haramain - Albania
Saudi/U.S.
Designation Date: June 2, 2004
UN
Designation Date: June 6, 2004
The
U.S. has information that indicates UBL may have financed the establishment of
AHF in Albania, which has been used as cover for terrorist activity in Albania
and in Europe. In late 2000, a close associate of a UBL operative moved to
Albania and was running an unnamed AHF subsidiary. In 1998, the head of
Egyptian Islamic Jihad in Albania was reportedly also a financial official for
AHF in Albania. This individual, Ahmed Ibrahim al-Nagar, was reportedly
extradited from Albania to Egypt in 1998. At his trial in Egypt, al-Nager
reportedly voiced his support for UBL and al Qaida’s August 1998 terrorist
attacks against the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.
Salih
Tivari, a senior official of the moderate Albanian Muslim community, was
murdered in January 2002. Ermir Gjinishi, who had been supported by AHF, was
detained in connection with the murder, but no charges were filed; he was later
released by Albanian authorities. Just prior to being murdered, Tivari informed
the AHF-affiliated Gjinishi that he intended to reduce "foreign Islamic
influence" in the Albanian Muslim community.
Prior
to his murder, Tivari controlled finances, personnel decisions, and donations
within the Albanian Muslim community. This provided him significant power,
enabling him to survive several attempts by extremists trained overseas to
replace him or usurp his power.
As of
late 2003, AHF was paying for, through a HAMAS member with close ties to AHF in
Albania, security personnel to guard the AHF building in Albania, which had
been shut down earlier in 2003.
Al
Haramain Islamic Foundation (Vazir a/k/a) - Bosnia
Saudi/U.S.
Designation Date: March 11, 2002
Amended December 22, 2003
UN
Designation Date: March 13, 2002
Amended December 26, 2003
Background: The Bosnia office of Al
Haramain is linked to Al-Gama’at al-Islamiyya, an Egyptian terrorist group
(designated under Executive Order 13224 on October 31, 2001) that was a
signatory to UBL’s February 23, 1998 fatwa against the United States. After the
Bosnia branch of Al Haramain was designated in March 2002, Al Haramain
officials closed its Bosnian operations. Officials in Bosnia then persuaded
senior Al Haramain officials to reopen the organization under a different name
in Travnik, Bosnia. The new non-governmental organization, Vazir, was founded
in May 2003 and established its headquarters in a business space formerly used by
Al Haramain. The Ministry of Justice and Administration for the Central Bosnian
canton registered Vazir on June 11, 2003, as an association for sport, culture,
and education. The office opened under the name Vazir in early August 2003. The
original designation of the Bosnian branch of Al Haramain was amended to add
the aka, “Vazir,” resulting in the formal designation of Vazir on December 22,
2003.
Benevolence
International Foundation
U.S.
Designation Date: November 19, 2002
UN
Designation Date: November 21, 2002 (Updated January 24, 2003)
Background: Benevolence International
Foundation (BIF-USA), incorporated in the State of Illinois in 1992, was a
U.S., tax-exempt, not-for-profit organization whose stated purpose was to
conduct humanitarian relief projects throughout the world. BIF-USA’s financial
accounts were blocked pending investigation in December 2001, and the charity
was fully designated by the United States on November 19, 2002, and in the
United Nations on November 21, 2002 The three closely linked but separately
incorporated entities of BIF-USA, Benevolence International Fund (BIF-Canada),
Bosanska Idealna Futura (BIF-Bosnia), and their branch offices were all
designated simultaneously. BIF operated around the world in Bosnia, Chechnya,
Pakistan, China, Ingushetia, Russia, and other nations.
Enaam
Arnaout, BIF's Chief Executive Officer and a member of the Board of Directors,
has been convicted in the United States for operating BIF as a racketeering
enterprise. Arnaout claimed that he did not know bin Laden personally, yet
substantial evidence documented the close relationship between Arnaout and
Usama bin Laden, dating from the mid-1980s. An article in the Arab News from
1988, reporting on bin Laden’s activities at the "al Masada"
mujahideen camp in Afghanistan, included a photograph of Arnaout and bin Laden
walking together. In a March 2002 search of BIF's offices, Bosnian law
enforcement authorities discovered a host of evidence linking Arnaout to bin
Laden and al Qaida. Among the files were scanned letters between Arnaout and
bin Laden, under their aliases. In one handwritten letter, bin Laden Indicated
that Arnaout was authorized to sign on bin Laden’s behalf. A second letter from
bin Laden to Arnaout discussed consulting Muhammad Atif regarding the
establishment of a group of fighters. Atif, a bin Laden aid, was indicted for
his role in the 1998 U.S. Embassy bombings in East Africa, and was designated a
supporter of terrorism under EO 13224 on September 23, 2001. Various documents
also established that Arnaout worked with others -- including members of al
Qaida -- to purchase rockets, mortars, rifles, and offensive and defensive
bombs, and to distribute them to various mujahideen camps, including camps
operated by al Qaida.
BIF
also provided additional support for and has been linked in other ways to al
Qaida and its operatives. First, BIF lent direct logistical support in 1998 to
Mamdouh Mahmud Salim, a bin Laden lieutenant present at the founding of al
Qaida. Salim has been indicted for conspiring to kill U.S. nationals. Testimony
at the 2001 trial of United States v. Bin Laden, et al, implicated Salim in
efforts to develop chemical weapons on behalf of al Qaida in the 1990s. As
early as 1992, Salim and UBL made efforts to develop conventional weapons and
to obtain nuclear weapons components. BIF was also linked to Mohamed Loay
Bayazid, who was implicated in the U.S. embassy bombings trial for his efforts,
approved by Salim, to obtain weapons components on behalf of UBL in 1993-1994.
Bayazid's driver's license application, dated September 12, 1994, identified
his address as the address of BIF's Illinois office. In the late 1990s, Saif al
Islam el Masry, a member of al Qaida's majlis al shura (consultation council),
served as an officer in BIF's Chechnya office.
AKA: Benevolent International Fund
For
Additional Information: http://www.treas.gov/press/releases/po3632.htm
Benevolence International Fund
U.S.
Designation Date: November 19, 2002
UN
Designation Date: November 21, 2002 (Updated January 24, 2003)
Background:
See
Benevolence International Foundation.
AKA: BIF
For
Additional Information: http://www.treas.gov/press/releases/po3632.htm
Bosanska
Idealna Futura (BIF a/k/a)
U.S.
Designation Date: November 19, 2002
UN
Designation Date: November 21, 2002 (Updated January 24, 2003)
Global
Relief Foundation
U.S.
Designation Date: October 18, 2002
UN
Designation Date: October 22, 2002
Background:
The Global
Relief Foundation (GRF), also known as Fondation Secours Mondial (FSM), and its
officers and directors have connections to, and have provided support for and
assistance to, Usama bin Laden (UBL), al Qaida, and other known terrorist
groups. Rabih Haddad, a senior GRF official who co-founded GRF and served as its
president throughout the 1990s and in the year 2000, worked for Makhtab
al-Khidamat (MK), the precursor organization to al Qaida, in Pakistan in the
early 1990s. In addition, GRF provided financial and other assistance to, and
received funding from, individuals associated with al Qaida, including Mohammed
Galeb Kalaje Zouaydi. Zouaydi is a suspected financier of al Qaida’s worldwide
terrorist efforts and was arrested in Europe in April 2002. Spain’s Interior
Ministry has described transfers totaling about $600,000 from Zouaydi and his
partners to al Qaida-related organizations, including GRF. GRF has admitted
receiving funds from Zouaydi, including over $200,000 to Nabil Sayadi, Head of
FSM, GRF’s Belgium office. GRF and FSM personnel had multiple contacts with
Wadih El-Hage, UBL’s personal secretary when UBL was in Sudan. El-Hage was
convicted in a U.S. district court in May 2001 for participating in a
conspiracy to kill United States nationals, which conspiracy included, among
other acts, the UBL-directed 1998 bombings of the U.S. Embassies in Kenya and
Tanzania. Documents recovered from a search in Kenya indicated that El-Hage was
in contact with GRF after he returned from visiting al Qaida leadership in
Afghanistan in February 1997. GRF acknowledged that El-Hage and Nabil Sayadi
were in contact during this period. GRF also dealt with officials of the
Taliban, which at the time was an entity subject to U.S. sanctions pursuant to
United States E.O. 13129 (prohibiting trade and most transactions with the Taliban
because it provided a safe haven and base of operations for UBL and al Qaida)
and subject to international sanctions pursuant to UNSCRs 1267 and 1333. In
November 2001, during the air strikes in Afghanistan, a GRF medical relief
coordinator traveled to Kabul and engaged in dealings and negotiations with
Taliban officials until the collapse of the Taliban regime. A set of
photographs and negatives discovered in 1997 in a trash dumpster outside of
GRF’s office in Illinois depicted large shipping boxes displayed under a GRF
banner. These boxes contained sophisticated communications equipment valued at
$120,000. GRF has stocked and promoted audio tapes and books authored by Sheikh
Abdullah Azzam, who was co-founder, with UBL, of MK as well as spiritual founder
of Hamas; these tapes and books glorified armed jihad. Despite Azzam’s
terrorist background, GRF enthusiastically promoted Azzam’s materials to the
public. GRF published several Arabic newsletters and pamphlets that advocated
armed action through jihad against groups perceived to be un-Islamic. A GRF
newsletter requested donations “for equipping the raiders, for the purchase of
ammunition and food, and for their [the Mujahideen’s] transportation so that
they can raise God the Almighty’s word . . .” GRF also received $18,521 from
the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development (HLF) in 2000. HLF, a
Dallas, Texas based Islamic charitable organization, was designated under E.O.
13224 on December 4, 2001, and under the European Union’s Regulation (EC) No.
2580/2001 on June 17, 2002, for its ties to terrorism. See also Taibah
International (Bosnia).
Makhtab
al-Khidamat / Al Kifah
U.S.
Designation Date: September 23, 2001
UN
Designation Date: October 6, 2001
Background: Makhtab al-Khidamat/Al Kifah
(MK) is considered to be the pre-cursor organization to al Qaida and the basis
for its infrastructure. MK was initially created by Usama bin Laden’s (UBL)
mentor, Shaykh Abdullah Azzam, who was also the spiritual founder of Hamas, as
an organization to fund mujahideen in the Soviet-Afghan conflict. MK has helped
funnel fighters and money to the Afghan resistance in Peshawar, Pakistan, and
had established recruitment centers worldwide to fight the Soviets. After Azzam
was killed in 1989, UBL and Sheikh Umar Abd al-Rahman (a.k.a. “The Blind
Sheikh”) continued to use MK to recruit fighters for the Soviet-Afghan
conflict. Sheikh Umar Abd al-Rahman was implicated in the 1993 World Trade
Center bombing and has been convicted for unrelated crimes pertaining to
planning terrorist attacks in the New York area. MK is known to have provided
funds and other support to several charities, including the Al Haramain
Foundation (AHF) and the Global Relief Foundation.
Bedr-Bosna
The owners of this company are Afro/Asians.
Formally they were employees, but in reality they just received salary from
donations. As employees were listed members of “Egyptian terrorist
group”-Egyptian Government looking for their extradition. It is case of the
following persons:
1. Muhammad
Sa'id Masrrur aka. Abu
Minah, or Seror Mohamed Saied alias Saied Colic.
The surname Colic is because Saied married with Bosnian Muslim Suvada Colic and
took her surname. He is responsible for
Security issues.
2. Jamal
al Husayni aka. Abu
Ahmad Al Misir or Imad Al
Misir citizen of Bosnia also known as Eslam Ahmed Faragalla or
Eslam Durmo. He married
Bosnian Muslim women Selvedinu Šehic.
3. Ashraf
Ali Gharbani Hasan aka.
Hassan Ashraf
4. Asim Ramulj aka. Talha, already prosecuted as terrorist.