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Sentenced terrorist transferred to Sweden

National News | 2009-03-26 | 3 comments
The Swedish citizen Mirsad Bektasevic will be transferred from his prison in Bosnia and Herzegovina to Sweden. Here he will serve the rest of his sentence for terrorist activities. This was the decision the lawyer of the 21 year-old received from the Swedish Ministry of Justice today.
Mirsad Bektasevic.
Photo: Court of BiH
- He got his family here, Sweden is his home country, so this is nothing but right, says lawyer Richard Backenroth to newspaper Svenska Dagbladet.

In January 2007 the then 19 year-old Mirsad Bektasevic from Kungälv, western Sweden, was sentenced to 15 years imprisonment for terrorism and attempted obstruction of an official person in the execution of official activity. After an appeal to higher court his sentence was lowered to eight years and four months.

It was during the autumn of 2005 that Bektasevic told his family that he was going to “visit relatives” in Sarajevo.

Shortly thereafter he was arrested when the security service raided the apartment where he lived. Found in the apartment was also 17 kilo of explosives, handguns, a so called suicide belt and ski masks. The police also found a video where two Bosnian men threatened to attack military forces in Iraq and Afghanistan. According to voice analysis was Bektasevic one of those men.

He has admitted that the video was made with a camera he had borrowed from his aunt, but not that it was he himself who made the threats.

Since 19 October 2005 has he been deprived of liberty, the three last couple of years in a prison in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Last year he applied to be transferred to a Swedish prison. The positive answer from the Swedish government came yesterday.

Where he will be placed is not yet clear.

- When sentenced for a longer term of prison you usually are placed at the national receiving unit of the Swedish Prison and Probation Service in Kumla (172 km west of Stockholm), but he could also be placed directly at another prison. There are some practical details that has to be solved, says Backenroth.

The Ministry of Justice mentions that the reason to allow the transfer of Bektasevic is based on that he is a Swedish citizen with a family in Sweden.

David Jonasson
david.jonasson@stockholmnews.com
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Readers' comments

2009-05-20 10:05 Robert wrote:
Bo, what is your source for that number?
2009-05-17 12:18 Bo wrote:
Islamic terrorists have carried out 13216 acts of terror since 9/11
2009-05-14 00:52 andrew nitzberg wrote:
Not all Muslims are terrorists, but it seems almost all terrorists are Muslims. The worst period for terrorism against Israel was 1952-1967. Why? - no occupation then. Maybe this has something to do with them and not us.


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