Muslim Hate in Kosovo
Muslim man from Kosovo charged in Fla. bomb plot
Associated Press | Posted: Monday, January 9, 2012
A Kosovo-born man was charged
with plotting to attack Tampa-area nightclubs and a sheriff's office
with bombs and an assault rifle to avenge wrongs done to Muslims,
federal authorities said Monday.
According to a federal complaint,
25-year-old Sami Osmakac recorded an eight-minute video shortly before
his arrest explaining why he wanted to bring terror to his "victims'
hearts" in the Tampa Bay area. Osmakac is a naturalized American
citizen born in Kosovo, then part of the former Yugoslavia in eastern
Europe.
In the video, Osmakac is seen
cross-legged on the floor with a pistol in his hand and an AK-47 behind
him. Osmakac said in the video that Muslim blood was more valuable than
that of people who do not believe in Islam, according to the complaint.
He said he wanted "payback" for wrong that was done to Muslims,
according to the complaint.
There is no indication that
Osmakac planned to attack the Republican National Convention, which
will be held in Tampa in August, federal authorities said.
The area's Muslim community
helped provide authorities with information, said Steve Ibison, the
special agent in charge of the FBI's Tampa division.
"This case is not about
the Muslim religion and it's not about the Muslim community," Ibison
said. "It's about an individual who committed a crime."
Hassan Shibly, a Tampa
attorney and the executive director of the Council on American-Islamic
Relations, said he met Osmakac briefly over the summer. Osmakac was
"ranting" about how CAIR was an "infidel organization," Shibly said.
"It was very clear he was very
disturbed very angry and very misguided about the Islamic faith," said
Shibly, adding that Osmakac did not appear to be a member of any of the
area's mosques and had "disassociated himself" from those houses of
worship. "He was very, very ignorant of Islam. He didn't know Arabic or
anything about basic Islamic teachings about promoting peace."
Shibly said the CAIR office
received calls from people in the Islamic community who were concerned
about Osmakac's extreme views.
"Contact the authorities as soon as possible," Shibly said he told those people.
Osmakac gave only brief answers
to basic questions during his first appearance in federal court Monday.
He wore a blue jail outfit and was shackled at his wrists and ankles.
His public defender, Alec Hall, declined to comment afterward.
U.S. Magistrate Judge Anthony
Porcelli ordered Osmakac held without bail. If convicted on the single
count of attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction, Osmakac could
face life in prison.
Osmakac was arrested Saturday _
the day officials said he was planning his attack _ after he allegedly
bought explosive devices and firearms from an undercover agent. The
firearms and explosives were disabled before the sale.
Osmakac lived with his parents in
a tan stucco home in Pinellas Park, Fla., a small city west of Tampa.
He worked occasionally at the Balkan Food Store and Bakery in St.
Petersburg, a small store owned by his parents.
On Monday, a man identifying
himself as Osmakac's older brother was at the store. He would not give
The Associated Press his name but said his brother was innocent.
"It's all made up," the man said. "I don't believe it."
According to public records,
Osmakac had one prior brush with the law. In April 2011, Tampa Police
said Osmakac, dressed in "what appeared to be traditional
Middle-Eastern attire with a small cloth" on his head, got into an
argument over religion outside a Lady Gaga concert in downtown Tampa.A
police report said anti-gay Christian protesters outside the concert
saw Osmakac driving by in a truck and turned their attention to him
because of his appearance.
"The protesters began verbally
berating the man and the Muslim faith and their attacks became personal
and nasty," wrote Tampa officer Kevin Krupa.
The report said Osmakac parked
his vehicle, walked up to the protesters and got into an argument with
one man who insulted Allah, Mohammed and the Quran. Osmakac was accused
of head butting one man and was charged with battery _ although Krupa
noted that the protesters were "not promoting peace or tolerance, but
rather of inciting violence and hate."That case had not yet been resolved, according to court records.Federal officials say Osmakac's new charges stem from information given to them by a confidential source in September 2011.
According to the federal report,
Osmakac walked into the source's business looking for al-Qaida flags.
The confidential source then hired Osmakac and was in constant contact
with federal officials and audio or video taped their conversations.
Two months later, the federal
complaint said, Osmakac and the confidential source discussed and
identified potential targets in Tampa that Osmakac wanted to attack.
Osmakac allegedly asked the
source for help getting firearms and explosives for the attacks, and
the source put him in touch with an undercover FBI employee.
On Dec. 21, Osmakac met with the
undercover agent and allegedly told the agent that he wanted to buy an
AK-47-style machine gun, Uzi submachine guns, high capacity magazines,
grenades and an explosive belt. During a later meeting, Osmakac gave
the agent a $500 down payment for the items.
Osmakac also asked the undercover
employee to build bombs that could be placed in three different
vehicles and detonated remotely, the U.S. Justice Department said in a
press release. Osmakac then planned to follow up with an attack using
the other weapons he asked for, authorities said.
On Jan. 1, Osmakac told the agent
he wanted to bomb nightclubs, the operations center of the Hillsborough
County Sheriff's Office and a business in Tampa.
Osmakac told the undercover FBI
agent that he wanted to detonate a car bomb and use the explosive belt
to "get in somewhere where there's a lot of people" and take hostages.
Osmakac told the agent that after
he took hostages he wanted to demand something from the "kuffar" _ an
Arabic word that means infidels or disbelievers of Islam, federal
authorities said.
According to the affidavit, he
also said, "Honestly, I would love to go for the Army people, but their
bases are so locked up, I have to do something else."
Osmakac said he wanted to take down the bridges that link Tampa to neighboring Pinellas County.
"This will crush the whole
economy," he allegedly said to the agent. "This would crush everything
man, they would have no more food coming in. They would, nobody would
have work."
During that meeting, the agent told Osmakac he could always change his mind about his plot.
"According to the complaint,
Osmakac immediately shook his head in the negative and stated, `We all
have to die, so why not die the Islamic way?'" according to the press
release.
Islamists plan violence after
Kosovo goes independent
April
30, 2007 -- In a Kosovo town of Gnjilane on April 16, top echelons of the ethnic
Albanian extremist leadership had a secret meeting where they unveiled a plan
code named "Small Serbia" that plans to activate al Qaeda cells across the
Balkans once Kosovo Albanians declare independence, writes Marko Lopusina, a
reporter for a Belgrade independent weekly Telegraph.
According to the information Lopusina obtained, the intelligence about the
Kosovo Albanian military plan and the meeting has been acquired by the Spanish
and French intelligence agents that have infiltrated al Qaeda cells in the
Balkans in the aftermath of al Qaeda attacks on Spain and Muslim riots in
France.
"It has
been shown that individuals in al Qaeda attacks on Spain and France came from
Bosnia and Kosovo, and that has led these agents to spy on these cells in the
Balkans," says an unidentified intelligence officer from Belgrade.
"In the
course of monitoring their own terrorists, Spanish and French uncovered that
Islamists in the Balkans and those in Europe are in a tight cooperation," says
the officer.
According to Eliza Manningham-Buller, Director General of the Security Service
MI5, British agents have, so far, uncovered 30 large terrorist operations that
al Qaeda is planning from Balkans and some 1,600 Islamists are being monitored.
The intended target is Europe.
According to the reports, ethnic Albanian terrorists from Kosovo and Macedonia
have paid 100,000 Euros for a recent transfer of wahhabists extremist gunmen
from Tuzla in Bosnia and from the emerging extremist hotbed in Serbia's southern
city of Novi Pazar.
Sources
indicate that the intent is to make Novi Pazar a logistic center for all of the
Islamists in Europe.
"There
are indications that the Wahhabis of Novi Pazar have interpreted recent
statements by the German Ambassador in Serbia, Zobel, as a green light to
initiate violence against Serbia," says Darko Trifunivic, an expert on Islamic
terrorism in the Balkans.
German
ambassador Andreas Zobel recently said that "Insisting on Kosovo as part of
Serbian territory would destabilize Serbia, because then the issue of Vojvodina
could open up, which is a new province in Serbia."
"This is
not a threat," said Zobel.
In
March, Serbian police has uncovered a Muslim terror camp and during the gun
battle that killed the leader, the brother of the killed leader escaped to
Kosovo and is being protected by local ethnic Albanian extremists.
At the
funeral of Dženaz Ismail Prentic, the slain al Qaeda leader from Novi Pazar,
hundreds of locals came to pay their respects, and his body covered in black has
been carried throughout the town in a long drawn parade.
At
Gnjilane meeting, sources have told Lopusina, the alleged independent NGOs would
initiate demands that southern Serbia requires cultural and national autonomy
which will be followed by demands from the local armed Muslim Albanians that
will be will be followed by armed violence.
NATO
troops in Kosovo have been informed of this plan, writes Lopusina.
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