U.S.: Bosnian War crimes suspect held

Man faces extradition for unlawful killing

By Rik Stevens
Associated Press

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — A fugitive accused of killing one prisoner and torturing another after a 1995 battle in his native Bosnia has been arrested in upstate New York, federal authorities said Wednesday.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials said Sulejman Mujagic, 50, of Utica now faces extradition at the request of authorities in Bosnia-Herzegovina, where he is charged
with unlawful killing of the enemy and unlawful wounding and torture of a prisoner of war while commanding a platoon in the Army of the Autonomous Province of Western Bosnia.

Mujagic was fighting for a region that had seceded from the central government during the Bosnian war and attacked the prisoners from the Army of Bosnia-Herzegovina after a battle on March 6, 1995, according to court documents.

Mujagic was arrested without incident at his home above a variety store he owns about 6 a.m. Wednesday. He was being held at a detention facility in Cayuga County pending a detention hearing on Monday.

Utica is home to more than 4,500 Bosnians, one of the largest concentrations in the U.S.

The court documents said a surviving prisoner after the 1995 battle and other soldiers on the scene told investigators that Mujagic and some of his men began kicking prisoners and beating them with rifle stocks and demanding information.

The documents said Mujagic turned at one point on Ekrem Baltic, demanding the name of his commander. After Baltic said he didn’t know, Mujagic fired a fatal burst from his AK-47 into Baltic’s chest, according to the charges.

Then he told Nisvet Cordic he would also be killed if he didn’t identify the commander. After his men beat Cordic to the ground, he was ordered to stand up and Mujagic opened fire at the ground near his feet when he said he didn’t know the name. One of the bullets hit Cordic in the leg, again knocking him to the ground, and Mujagic kicked Cordic’s wound, according to the charges.

Mujagic and his men allegedly continued to beat Cordic and ordered him to crawl up a hill toward the lines of a Serbian unit allied with Mujagic’s. More shots were fired at Cordic, wounding him in the thigh and back. It wasn’t initially clear how Cordic survived the attack.