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Swedish police killer charged with Bosnia torture (mercenary fought with Croats)
The Local ^ | July 14, 2006

Posted on 07/14/2006 7:12:35 AM PDT by joan

Published: 14th July 2006 11:50 CET

Jackie Arklöv, currently serving a life sentence for murdering two policemen in Malexander in 1999, was charged on Friday with crimes against international law in Bosnia.

"The crimes were committed during the spring, summer and autumn of 1993, mostly during the summer," said prosecutor Lise Tamm to TT.

According to Tamm, Arklöv committed robbery and torture against prisoners of war as well as civilians, and demostrated 'particular brutality'. The crimes are said to have been carried out in different jails in Bosnia Herzegovinia where Arklöv was a guard.

Arklöv was a mercenary soldier in a Croatian militia in the conflict and was sentenced by a court in Mostar in 1995 to 13 years in jail for war crimes. The sentence was reduced to eight years by the supreme court in Sarajevo.

But he was released after a year as part of a prisoner exchange.

When Arklöv returned to Sweden in 1996 he was arrested again, but freed due to a lack of witness evidence.

But the investigation into the rare charge of crimes against international law was reopened in 2004 after a witness came forward with new evidence. Since then, a large number of witnesses have been interviewed by investigators.

Arklöv is currently serving a life sentence for his role in the notorious Malexander murders.

On 28th May 1999 he and two others stole 2.6 million kronor from a bank in Kisa, in Östergötland. Two policemen, Olle Borén and Robert Karlström, stopped the robbers on a main road in Malexander, 25 km from Kisa. But when they tried to arrest the three men, the officers were overpowered and shot dead with their own weapons.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: bosnia; copkiller; mercenary; mostar; robber; sweden; torturer
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1 posted on 07/14/2006 7:12:39 AM PDT by joan
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To: tgambill; Bokababe; FormerLib; kronos77

These mercenaries were often ex-cons or people looking to fight, kill and get away with crimes that a war situation provides. They often just made a greater mess of things in Bosnia.


2 posted on 07/14/2006 7:16:24 AM PDT by joan
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To: joan

He was born in Liberia, and adopted by Swedes.

Somehow he joined a neo-nazi group. How did that work since his mother is black?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jackie_Arkl%C3%B6v


3 posted on 07/14/2006 7:31:36 AM PDT by vladimir998 (Ignorance of Scripture is ignorance of Christ. St. Jerome)
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Wikipedia article on the killer. Interesting how easy the Bosnian Muslim courts were on him even though he brutally tortured their people in concentration camps. And notice how all the neo-Nazis went to fight for the Croats (and sometimes the Muslims) but not the Serbs which the media was always comparing to the Nazis.

Jackie Arklöv

Jackie Arklöv (born June 6, 1973) is a Swedish major criminal and police killer.

Arklöv was born in Liberia, his biological mother was black and his father was white. At the age of 3 he was adopted by a couple from a small village in northern Sweden, and in his teens he ironically developed a strong interest in nazism and World War II. Later on he joined a nazi organisation and became an active supporter.

Arklöv participated voluntarily in the war in Yugoslavia in the 1990s, as a mercenary on the Croatian side when he was only 19 years old. He has been accused of war crimes, including torturing Bosniak prisoners in camps in Gabela and Grabovina. After the war he was sentenced to 13 years in prison by a Bosnian court. They later changed the sentence to 8 years, taking Arklöv's young age into consideration. He spent 1 year in a Bosnian prison, but returned to Sweden after an exchange of prisoners organized by the Swedish Red Cross. In Sweden he was taken to custudy, but after a while he was acquitted for lack of evidence. However, in march 2004, the Dagens Nyheter journalist Maciej Zaremba published an article where he strongly critisized the closure of the case, and he also managed to find several witnesses to the war crimes. Later that year the prosecuter decided to re-open the investigation, and in june 2006 it was clear that Arklöv will be prosecuted. When this is written (july 2006), it is not decided when.

While in custody Arklöv received several letters from another nazi, Tony Olsson, who was starting a new nazi organisation and, impressed by Arklöv's war experience, wanted him to join. Arklöv wrote back, and the two became friends. After being released, Arklöv and Olsson met with the other members of the newly started NRA (Nationalistiska Republikanska Armén, the Nationalistic Republican Army), among them Andreas Axelsson and Mats Nilsson. This resulted in a robbery tour in the Swedish province Östergötland in 1999, which ended on May 28 in the small town of Kisa where Arklöv, Olsson and Axelsson robbed a bank. They got away with over 2 million Swedish krona, but during their excape, they came across two policemen who were setting up road blocks just outside the small community of Malexander. There was a shootout between the robbers and the policemen, and finally the policemen were literally executed with their own weapons. Arklöv and Olsson fled, but Axelsson had been hit by a bullet and was taken to the hospital by a car flagged down by Arklöv. On May 31 Arklöv was shot down by the police in Tyresö outside Stockholm and again arrested and put to custody.

During the trial, Arklöv claimed to be completely innocent. He said he had been in Stockholm the entire time and did not take part in any of the robberys or the murders. This time, however, the evidences against him were strong. The police had found his fingerprints on a gun, his DNA on a mask and in the car. After that he confessed to the robbery in Kisa, but still denied to have killed the policemen. All three of them did, and it could never be proved who was the killer. The court then found them all guilty of murder, since it was clear that they had all been shooting at the two policemen, and they were sentenced to life imprisonment. The sentence was appealed to the Court of Appeal, and Arklöv kept denying he had anyting to do with the murders. The Court of Appeal gave the same sentence; life imprisonment for all three.

In 2001 Arklöv suddenly decided to confess. He was indeed the one who fired the final, lethal shots at the policemen. Olsson and Axelsson moved a petition for a new trial to the Supreme Court, but they regarded the life sentence as written in such a way that Arklöv's confession wouldn't change anything. The petition was rejected. At the same time Arklöv said he had abandoned his nazi beliefs and had contacted the Exit group for help.

Today Arklöv is serving his life sentence at the Kumla High Security Prison.

On the lighter side, Arklöv is a talanted artist, and had 7 paintings put out on an exhibition for prison art at Långholmen in Stockholm.

4 posted on 07/14/2006 7:36:22 AM PDT by joan
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To: joan
re :And notice how all the neo-Nazis went to fight for the Croats (and sometimes the Muslims) but not the Serbs which the media was always comparing to the Nazis.

May of been historical during the Seconds World War Croatia was a axis partner i.e junior and there were links between the Ustashi and SS.

There was even a Croatian legion fighting on the eastern front.

5 posted on 07/14/2006 7:42:38 AM PDT by tonycavanagh
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To: tonycavanagh

And the Bosnian Muslims were part of the Ustasha and they fought on the Eastern front with the Croats.


6 posted on 07/14/2006 7:46:01 AM PDT by joan
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To: joan
re :And the Bosnian Muslims were part of the Ustasha and they fought on the Eastern front with the Croats.

I think they had there own formation the Hanjar SS division.

The German policy was to keep the units separate, because uniting them could lead to a more powerful formation that could challenge the Germans dominance in that ares.

7 posted on 07/14/2006 7:49:24 AM PDT by tonycavanagh
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To: tonycavanagh
These are a few paragraphs from Carl Savich's research:

http://www.serbianna.com/columns/savich/006.shtml

Dzafer Kulenovic, the Bosnian Muslim Vice-President of the NDH, had been the president of the Yugoslavian Muslim Organization (JMO) and was the political leader of the Bosnian Muslims. Eleven Muslim political leaders of the JMO were invited to be part of the Ustasha NDH parliament in Zagreb. The Ustasha Commissioner for Bosnia-Hercegovina was Bosnian Muslim Hakija Hadzic

…From the beginning of the German invasion of Yugoslavia, the Bosnian Muslims had sought to convince the Germans that Bosnia-Hercegovina should be a Nazi Protectorate, that is, have an autonomous political existence. In 1941, over 100,000 Bosnian Muslim conscripts were available to fight in the military formations of the Third Reich. Bosnian Muslim soldiers were in the Ustasha death squads, the Domobranci (Home Guards), and the Croatian Army. Bosnian Muslim soldiers were also in the Nazi-Ustasha German-Croatian "Legion" units, such as the 369th, 373rd, andÝ392nd Infantry Divisions. In The Holocaust: The Fate of European Jewry, 1932-1945, Leni Yahil remarked that the Bosnian Muslims even sent their soldiers to fight on the Russian front as part of the Nazi German forces:Ý "One of their units later joined the German forces fighting in Russia." The 369th Reinforced Croat Infantry Regiment, made up of Croats and Bosnian Muslims, fought at Stalingrad where it was destroyed. The NDH also sent the Italian-Croat Legion, attached to the Italian 3rd Mobile Division, to the Russian front where it was destroyed during the Don retreat.

The Bosnian Muslims formed purely Muslim formations as well, the most important of which was the Muslim Volunteer Legion, led by Mohammed Hadzieffendic. Other Muslim formations were the Zeleni Kadar (Green Cadres), Nazi formations created by deserters from the Home Guards (Domobranci), led by Neshad Topcic, the Muslim nationalist group, the Young Muslims (Mladi Muslimani), Huska Miljkovicâs Muslim Army, and the Gorazde-Foca milicijas (policing units).

8 posted on 07/14/2006 7:56:59 AM PDT by joan
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To: joan; zagor-te-nej; Lion in Winter; Honorary Serb; jb6; Incorrigible; DTA; ma bell; Banat; ...

I was trying to look up info on the use of mercenaries in Croatia re your article -- thinking in terms of the rag-tag criminal like your guy -- but I ran across important info, not only on MPRI, but also on how MPRI actually operates. Thought I should share it.

This was an interview with a Vice Admiral Jack Shanahan, director of the Center for Defense Information. The entire interview is here http://www.cdi.org/adm/1113/transcript.html but the part re Croatia & Bosnia is below:

...."NARRATOR: If EO represents the "boots on the ground" end of the mercenary spectrum, the other end is represented by a firm called MPRI. MPRI stands for Military Professionals Resources Inc. Headquartered in Alexandria, Virginia, it claims to be "the greatest corporate assemblage of military expertise in the world." Founded in 1987 by eight former United States senior military officers, MPRI says it only operates in areas approved by the US State Department.

MPRI has very close ties to the US Government. Several former high-ranking US military officers are employees of MPRI.

LTGEN ED SOYSTER: MPRI was formed by our president and CEO in 1987 with a recognition that there is a great national resource in the retired military community. And if that talent could be brought together, we could provide various military expertise in a variety of ways to our government.

NARRATOR: Ed Soyster is a retired US Army lieutenant general and a vice president for International Operations at MPRI.

LTGEN SOYSTER: The difficulty with the term "mercenary" is that no one can define. The United Nations has not successfully done it. Other commissions, protocols have not; they've taken different approaches. So, it's a difficult term to define. And I've looked at all those definitions as they've tried to do that and we don't meet any of those criteria.

NARRATOR: He also emphasizes that MPRI is not a fighting force.

LTGEN SOYSTER: No one at MPRI has ever carried a gun, nor will we ever carry a gun. There's every reason for that that you can think of. It would not be a very good business practice. I don't know how you'd manage liability and all those things associated with it. It would be in such contrast to the principles of this company.

NARRATOR: MPRI is best known for its work in recent years in training military forces in Croatia and Bosnia. In March 1994, the Pentagon referred the Croatian defense minister to MPRI. Since then, about 15 MPRI employees have been training the Croatian army so that it can provide national security and meet defense needs as Croatia makes the transition into a democratic society.

In May 1996, MPRI landed its highest profile assignment to date. The firm was granted a contract to train the military forces of Bosnia. Currently, 185 MPRI personnel participate in the US-supervised "Train and Equip" program. The program's objective is to integrate and build up the Bosnian army of Muslims and Croats against the Serbs.

The Train and Equip program hopes to establish the military balance required for an enduring peace in Bosnia. MPRI runs a school and battlefield simulation center and is helping construct a large military firing range.

LTGEN SOYSTER: We're teaching a total military program. We've established a school to provide individual training for officers and noncommissioned officers. We've established a simulation center to train battalion and brigade staffs and also for leader development. We're developing a combat training center, where they'll have ranges and so forth and manuever room. We conduct unit training for the individual units, so they can bring all this together, and we teach the new equipment training.

NARRATOR: Proponents of the Train and Equip program believe that the sooner Bosnian forces are capable of defending themselves, the sooner international troops can be removed from the region. However, the goal of strengthening Muslim-Croat units in Bosnia to offset the Bosnian Serb forces may have dangerous consequences in a region racked by ethnic tension and civil war.

Military experts assert that an increase of arms and funds to Bosnian forces may lead to renewed violence. Although MPRI is limited to training the Bosnian army in defense tactics, soldiers say there is little distinction between defensive and offensive strategies. But GEN Soyster thinks that such a view is overstated.

LTGEN SOYSTER: Well, it would be hard to say that if you can use a tank defensively that you couldn't use it offensively. I would tell you though, at least in the training of the US Army, an entirely different set of skills are taught for offensive operations, an entirely different organization is provided to the US Army. And so, the military analyst who thinks that that's an easy leap, he's never gone from the defense on to the offense.

NARRATOR: GEN Soyster also disagrees with those who say that MPRI was used to train the Bosnian military, as a part of the Train and Equip program, in order to sidestep a public debate in the United States over foreign policy.

LTGEN SOYSTER: The reality is that to provide the kind of training and expertise that we can provide versus the government is -- for instance, we have 200 people in Bosnia. They are senior officers and senior noncommissioned officers. If you took the same expertise from the active divisions, you would considerably degrade their readiness to provide the same level of experience.

NARRATOR: It is true that regardless of who provides it, nobody can be sure what the ultimate effect of providing military training will be.

MR. ISENBERG: It is possible that the skills they teach a foreign client could someday be used in a sort of boomerang effect, in terms of whoever they teach or whoever they train and advise will have their military skills improved. They will become more deadly on the battlefield. Just like a weapons system, you can't say in the long run who those skills will be turned against.".....


9 posted on 07/14/2006 7:58:35 AM PDT by Bokababe (www.savekosovo.org)
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To: joan

Thanks for that, always good to have more links.


10 posted on 07/14/2006 8:02:19 AM PDT by tonycavanagh
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To: tonycavanagh; Bokababe
Have you guys seen this site about mercenary "martyrs": Book of Remembrance
11 posted on 07/14/2006 8:10:43 AM PDT by joan
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To: joan
"Have you guys seen this site about mercenary "martyrs": Book of Remembrance?"

OK, that'a a "Wow!" Ping, ping, ping!

12 posted on 07/14/2006 8:18:47 AM PDT by Bokababe (www.savekosovo.org)
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To: Bokababe

In looking up those names of the dead, I see a few from the US -- notably the Kosovo Albanians from the US who went back to fight for Kosovo. I wonder what happened to the rest of those American Kosovo Albanians who lived, post-war? Did we let them back in to the US? Aren't there US laws about fighting for a foreign country and then not being able to return here without imprisonment?


13 posted on 07/14/2006 8:23:27 AM PDT by Bokababe (www.savekosovo.org)
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To: joan

wrong, joan... Many "mercs" are not as you describe. Many are recently retired from the military still looking for adventure. They recieve a great looking paycheck and put to use their skills and experience they've gained over the years. Besides, it fulfills their "rush".


14 posted on 07/14/2006 9:49:13 AM PDT by ma bell ("Take me to Pristine. I want to see the "real terrorists", Former Marine)
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To: Bokababe; Hoplite; tgambill
boka wrote "I wonder what happened to the rest of those American Kosovo Albanians who lived, post-war? Did we let them back in to the US? Aren't there US laws about fighting for a foreign country and then not being able to return here without imprisonment?"

Don't know, maybe a buzz to hoplite can answer your questions, boka.

15 posted on 07/14/2006 9:52:53 AM PDT by ma bell ("Take me to Pristine. I want to see the "real terrorists", Former Marine)
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To: ma bell
You are probably right!

You know, in spite of seeing what has gone on for all these years with the break-up of Yugo, the internal motivation for these alliances between the Croats & the Muslims had always mystified me. Then I was reading this page on the WWII Holocaust in Croatia and ran across the following passage:

"The Croatian Nazi Mile Budak, who was a Minister in the Ustasha regime talked on 6th June 1941 at a meeting in Krizevci, about the question of the liquidation of the Serb Orthodox religion. He described Croatia - which had also annexed Bosnia - thus:

"We are a state of two religions: Catholicism and Islam"

And then it hit me -- that is really what they have been trying to accomplish with both WWII and the recent wars -- turn the entire former Yugoslavia into "a state of two religions: Catholicism and Islam"

The Croats & Muslims wiped out virtually all the Jews in WWII, so that left only the Serbs to deal with. They did a good job ethnically cleansing the Serbs out of large areas of the former Yugo during these last wars, and let a stagnant economy and polical impotence drive out another portion of Serbs into Western Europe and the US.

One more round of this in fifty years and Serb survivors be like the Jews before the founding of Israel -- a wandering tribe of people with no homeland to call their own -- and that is perhaps their ultimate goal.

16 posted on 07/14/2006 11:12:44 AM PDT by Bokababe (www.savekosovo.org)
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To: ma bell; joan

Here was the link: http://www.holocaustrevealed.org/_domain/holocaustrevealed.org/Yugoslavia/Yugoslavia-Croatia.htm


17 posted on 07/14/2006 11:14:40 AM PDT by Bokababe (www.savekosovo.org)
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To: Bokababe; joan; tgambill; montyspython; FormerLib
his allegations that i fought for the VRS and I should be labeled a traitor and put in prison contradicts what I posed to him - "why does he not say the same towards those that went to Kosovo and fought for a group on the terrorist watch list." why does he not have the same hatred towards them as he does for me?

shoot, he wished me dead! Isn't that right, joan?

So Tom, that would put you and I on hoplites "mercenary" list, i.e traitors to the USA. So much sadness I have for that sap.

18 posted on 07/14/2006 11:31:23 AM PDT by ma bell ("Take me to Pristine. I want to see the "real terrorists", Former Marine)
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To: ma bell
"So much sadness I have for that sap."

Why? He has nothing but contempt for the truth and despise anyone who exposes that fact. F*em.

19 posted on 07/14/2006 12:24:43 PM PDT by montyspython (Love that chicken from Popeye's)
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To: tonycavanagh

That's right. They got wiped out at Stalingrad ( I think ). The few survivors were given a choice. Take a one way ticket to Siberia or join a "Yugoslav unit" ( I can't recall the exact name of the unit. John Ericksons' book on the Eastern front details it ) and fight with the Soviets.


20 posted on 07/15/2006 11:37:07 AM PDT by infidel_and_proud
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