serbianna.com
February 2, 2011 – 10:10 am
A Vienna-born Serbian Muslim named Nedžad Balkan (a.k.a. Ebu Muhammed) is believed to have been behind the most recent terror attack in the central Bosnian town of Bugojno, and his connection to Bosnia and Herzegovina signals the rise of a new and avowedly violent sect of Wahhabis that has regional intelligence agencies on alert.
Nedžad Balkan, born in Vienna, Austria, is the son of Bosniaks from Serbia’s predominately Muslim Sandžak region straddling the border of the Republic of Montenegro. A former boxer and night club bouncer in his younger days, Balkan, now in his mid-30s, is the leader of the Sahaba Mosque in Vienna’s Seventh bezirk (district) and the alleged financier of the Serbia-based Sandžak Wahhabis.
Similar to many regional Wahhabi clerical leaders, Balkan studied at the Islamic University in Medina, Saudi Arabia in the early 1990s. Reportedly disappointed with the insufficiently Islamist politics of the Saudi regime, Balkan departed before graduating. Upon his return to the West, Balkan preached at Vienna’s al-Tawhid mosque, but left due to a disagreement with another radical cleric and purported leader of the Bosnian Wahhabis, Muhamed Porca, [1] and other members of the mosque. [2]...more...
A Vienna-born Serbian Muslim named Nedžad Balkan (a.k.a. Ebu Muhammed) is believed to have been behind the most recent terror attack in the central Bosnian town of Bugojno, and his connection to Bosnia and Herzegovina signals the rise of a new and avowedly violent sect of Wahhabis that has regional intelligence agencies on alert.
Nedžad Balkan, born in Vienna, Austria, is the son of Bosniaks from Serbia’s predominately Muslim Sandžak region straddling the border of the Republic of Montenegro. A former boxer and night club bouncer in his younger days, Balkan, now in his mid-30s, is the leader of the Sahaba Mosque in Vienna’s Seventh bezirk (district) and the alleged financier of the Serbia-based Sandžak Wahhabis.
Similar to many regional Wahhabi clerical leaders, Balkan studied at the Islamic University in Medina, Saudi Arabia in the early 1990s. Reportedly disappointed with the insufficiently Islamist politics of the Saudi regime, Balkan departed before graduating. Upon his return to the West, Balkan preached at Vienna’s al-Tawhid mosque, but left due to a disagreement with another radical cleric and purported leader of the Bosnian Wahhabis, Muhamed Porca, [1] and other members of the mosque. [2]...more...
read more: serbianna.com
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