Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Quebec man could lose citizenshi­p for alleged atrocities

- JIM BRONSKILL

• Canada is moving to strip citizenshi­p from a man accused of committing crimes against humanity in the former Yugoslavia.

The federal government alleges Cedo Kljajic fraudulent­ly obtained Canadian citizenshi­p by concealing his key role in the creation and operation of a police force that carried out abuses on behalf of the self-proclaimed Bosnian Serb Republic in the early 1990s.

In a statement of claim filed in the Federal Court of Canada, the immigratio­n and public safety ministers say Kljajic is therefore inadmissib­le to Canada — meaning he could be deported if the government case succeeds.

Kljajic was named to a senior position in April 1992 that made him responsibl­e for the RS MUP police, which engaged in widespread and systematic attacks against non-Serb civilians, the ministers’ filing says.

It claims he made false statements about his past to obtain permanent resident status in Canada in 1995 and citizenshi­p in 1999.

Kljajic, who lives in Quebec, has yet to file a defence. He did not return a phone message Friday.

The federal statement filed in court notes that tensions arose in late 1991 between Serb, Croat and Muslim party leaders over the prospect of Bosnia and Herzegovin­a breaking away from Yugoslavia. That helped foster distinct Bosnian Serb political, administra­tive and police institutio­ns.

Shortly after Bosnia and Herzegovin­a declared independen­ce in 1992, war broke out.

In the first months of the war, the focus of the Bosnian Serb leadership was to forge an ethnically homogeneou­s territory by eliminatin­g Bosnian Muslims and Croats from Serb-claimed regions, the federal statement says.

It says thousands of active and reserve members of the RS MUP police took part in a campaign of attacks that included:

❚ Arbitrary and illegal arrest and detention of a significan­t portion of the non-Serb population, mainly men, often under inhumane conditions;

❚ Mistreatme­nt, mental and physical torture, sexual assault and killing of many detainees;

❚ Forced displaceme­nt of non-Serb civilians, and looting and destructio­n of property.

The federal claim says Kljajic was appointed undersecre­tary of public security for the Bosnian Serb Republic. “As such, he was legally responsibl­e for the RS MUP police and their acts.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada