A
Tragic Warning By
Merima Spahic
SARAJEVO,
Feb. 23 (BETA) - On Christmas Eve last year, Muamer Topalovic, 25, a Bosniak from
Konjic, a town in Herzegovina-Neretva canton, entered the home of the Andjelic
family, Croatian returnees in the village of Kostajnica, and opened fire, killing
three family members. This gruesome killing was the gravest crime to date against
returnees in post-war Bosnia.Topalovic
quickly confessed the crime to investigators, explaining that he had committed
it for religious reasons. The Andjelics were killed just as they were preparing
to leave their home to attend a midnight Christmas mass. "A
month ago, while I was praying in the mosque, it first occurred to me that I should
do something against the Croats. I wanted to scare them. I didn't want to kill
them," Topalovic told Reuf Zaimovic, an investigating judge in Mostar. The
Konjic townspeople regard Topalovic as a religious fanatic. He was a member of
the Furgan humanitarian organization for Bosnia, financed by the High Saudi Committee,
and the Active Islamic Youth organization. Topalovic
readily confessed to the crime, but investigators still do not know the motive
for Topalovic's brutal murder of his neighbors on Christmas Eve. Cantonal
Interior Minister Goran Bilic was decisive in saying that motive for murder "is
pure religious fanaticism." "Topalovic acted alone. He killed the Andjelics
with a rifle," Bilic said. "I
remember firing at a man and wounding him in the arm. Then someone grabbed the
rifle and pushed me against the wall. I fired again. I know that I hit that other
man as well. I remember two children slipping past me. I didn't want to shoot
at them because they were children. I entered the room. The wounded man was standing
and two women tried to hide under the beds. I shot at the man again. I remember
shooting at the women as well, but I don't know whether I hit them or not. Then
I turned to leave. I saw the children hiding under the table. I went pass them,
they were just children," said Topalovic relating his crime to the investigating
judge. Topalovic
murdered Andjelko Andjelic, 68, his sister Mara, 48, and his daughter Zorka, 30.
Andjelko's son, Marinko, 31, suffered serious injuries which have left him without
an eye and the ability to use his left arm. The
inhabitants of Kostajnica describe the Andjelic family as good neighbors, God-fearing
folk and sincere friends. The
murder deeply shook the public in Bosnia and Herzegovina and, for the first time
after the war in Bosnia, members of all religious communities, as well as international
representatives in Bosnia, united to send a strong message condemning the crime. Two
days after the tragedy, International Community High Representative in Bosnia
Paddy Ashdown, Muslim-Croat Federation President Safet Halilovic, Bosnian Council
of Ministers Chairman Adnan Terzic, Islamic Community head Mustafa Ceric and numerous
domestic and foreign officials visited the family. All of them said that the
police and judiciary ought to receive support in their efforts to punish the perpetrator
of this crime in the strongest possible way. "It
should be stressed that after the murder of three members of the Andjelic family,
the Inter-Religious Council of Bosnia and Herzegovina, which brings together representatives
of all four major confessions, reacted and condemned any violence committed
in the name of religion and against religion and attacks on returnees, and urged
the relevant state bodies to do their job and ensure that the freedom and rights
of all peoples living in Bosnia and Herzegovina are protected," said the
Bosnian Helsinki Committee in an analysis on the condition of human rights in
that country. "Unfortunately,
reactions of this sort from religious dignitaries are rare, and they could exert
their authority to directly contribute to the restoration of tolerance, trust
and safety for the returnees," the Committee said. Muamer
Topalovic was arrested in Serbia in 1998, for planning the assassination of former
Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic. He spent 15 months in a prison in Sabac,
and 20 months in a prison in Sremska Mitrovica. He
says that he wanted to kill Milosevic because "he brought great injustice
and evil to the Bosniaks." He never revealed any details of his plan, and
the public in Serbia knows little about it. Prosecutor
Mirsad Resulovic says that Topalovic is well-aware of his actions "because
several times during the investigation he said he regretted murdering innocent
people." Topalovic lived with his parents, off of their meager income, he
himself being unemployed. He claims that he frequented a psychiatrist several
years ago. Muamer's
father, Avdija, has renounced and disowned his son. "I am fighting for my
wife Hafiza's life now; she had a nervous breakdown after learning of what Muamer
did. Her health is now completely shot. Our whole family has renounced Muamer,"
Avdija said. He
adds that his son never saw a psychiatrist, and that Muamer had said this to support
an appeal for his release pending trial -- his claims of suffering from extreme
psychic disorders -- are not true. Avdija lays the whole blame for Muamer's conduct
on vehabis, islamic extremists, with whom he began associating several years ago. "He
was an excellent pupil. But he abandoned school when he met one bearded vehabi.
He came to me one day and said: 'I met a wonderful man who preaches and teaches
wonderfully.' Soon, he was completely theirs," Avdija recalls. Muamer's
father says that the purpose of the vehabi doctrine is to transform followers
into "heroes, regardless of the cost," and adds that it is even possible
that Muamer did not murder the family at all, but took the blame in order to become
"a famous, brave vehabi and a hero among his friends." Muamer's maternal
uncle Remzo Corbadzic thinks the same: "Vehabis seduced him. They are to
blame for everything." Muamer
Topalovic is currently in a Mostar prison. His trial is scheduled for March. No
lawyer has accepted to defend him, and he has a court-appointed defense counsel.
The vehabi order has given him no public support, while the Islamic Active Youth
and Furgan organizations, upon learning of Topalovic's crime, denied that he was
a member of either of them. As for Bosnia, this is yet another warning that the
war is not over for some. (BETA) |