"Defendant Husein Bosnic is guilty of...consciously, during 2013-14
from the position of religious authority, publicly inciting, recruiting
and organising a terrorist group,"
A Bosnian Muslim cleric was jailed for seven years on Thursday for recruiting fighters for Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, under a new law aimed at stopping people joining militants in the Middle East.
Husein Bosnic, known as an unofficial leader of the ultra-conservative Salafi movement in Bosnia, was arrested last year and was among 17 others on trial in Bosnia for suspected links with militant groups in Syria and Iraq.
"Defendant
Husein Bosnic is guilty of...consciously, during 2013-14 from the
position of religious authority, publicly inciting, recruiting and
organising a terrorist group," the chairman of the court council, Amela Huskic, said.
Although
most Bosnian Muslims, known as Bosniaks, are moderate, some have
embraced Salafism under the influence of foreign fighters who came to
Bosnia during its 1992-95 war to help Muslims fight against Orthodox
Serbs and Catholic Croats.
Last month, in the
first verdict under the new law, Bosnia's state court convicted four
other people for financing terrorist activities and recruiting Bosnians
to fight in Syria and sentenced them to up to 3-1/2 years in prison.
Police
estimate about 200 Bosnians, including women and children, have left to
join fighters in Syria's civil war over the past three years, of whom
more than 50 have returned and about 30 have been killed.
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