In late October 2005, Bosnian police arrested five teenagers on suspicion of plotting terrorist attacks on Western embassies in Sarajevo links of london charms. Days later, police in Denmark arrested six teenagers believed to be linked to those arrested in Bosnia. The first two men arrested in Sarajevo were identified as Cesur Abdulkadir and Mirsad Bektasevic, whose confiscated mobile phones and laptop computers led to the arrest in December 2005 of three more suspects in the Sarajevo suburb of Hadzici links of london sale. One of the suspects was believed to be the leader of a Bosnian militant cell. The BiH State Prosecutor’s Office indicated that Bektasevic had arrived in Sarajevo from Sweden and Abdulkadir from Denmark. A young man of Afro-Asian origin with Danish citizenship arrived from Denmark.
BiH police alerted the Danish authorities after finding the Danish citizen’s contacts in the confiscated mobile phone and laptops links of london items. Danish police had revealed that a raid on the suspect’s parents’ home in Denmark had uncovered US$500,000 in cash, of as-yet undetermined origin.
German sources said that the four British subjects went missing after they spent one month in Sarajevo, mainly around King Fahd Mosque, a major gathering point for foreign jihadists in the city. Their movement included Vogosca, Kakanj, and Hadzici near Sarajevo. The investigation of Bektasevic’s group came to the conclusion that Hadzici “served as the base for Bosnian terror cell”. Bajro Ikanovic was believed to be the leader of the group v.