Hi
I have a friend from Bosnia who came as a refugee in the 90s. Anyway, i asked him and he told me that his grandfather who was an active soldier during the war said that pakistan sent a container ship to Bosnia with small arms (AKs, grenades, anti tank weaponry and so on) but the thing was, since Bosnia just have a small strip of coastline, the ship had to dock into Croatia, and they took about 2\3 of the cargo and the rest went to Bosnia. There were also many mujahedin who formerly fought the sovjets in Afghanistan, many of these where from pakistan. So i do not know if this is true, but this is what i have heard.
I watched a documentary once i think it was on channel 4 late night,But they said the same things you said that pakistan container ship to Bosnia with weapons and 2/3 where taken by the croatians.
A former ISI chief Lt Gen Javed Nasir said that that Pakistan defied the United Nations ban on supply of arms to Bosnia and pakistan supplied sophisticated anti-tank guided missiles to the bosnian govt that were air lifted to them by the ISI.
He said that despite the UN ban on supply of arms to the besieged Bosnians, he successfully air lifted sophisticated anti-tank guided missiles which turned the tide in favour of Bosnian Muslims and forced the Serbs to lift the siege, much to the annoyance of the US.
The US threatened Pakistan that it would be declared as a terrorist state, if it did not remove Lt Gen Javed Nasir from the post of the ISI chief.
It was therefore at the behest of the US government's official demand that he was prematurely compulsorily retired from service by the caretaker government of Mir Balkh Sher Mazari on 13 May, 1993.
Pakistan writes off Bosnia's wartime debt
June 16, 2005
BIH
Text of report by Bosnia-Hercegovina public radio on 16 June
[Presenter] The one-time affair over Pakistan's loan finally has its denouement. Namely, the Islamic Republic of Pakistan has written off its wartime loan to our country to the tune of 20m dollars. This loan, which the public has been unaware of for a long time, was spent on the defence of Bosnia-Hercegovina, former Foreign Minister Haris Silajdzic says. Sanija Saljihi has the report:
[Reporter Saljihi] This is a loan worth 20m dollars which Bosnia-Hercegovina was supposed to give back in 1995. The problem with the Pakistani loan is that nothing was officially known about it until three years ago when that country's ambassador in Sarajevo asked the then members of the Bosnia-Hercegovina Presidency what the chances were that this loan, which the Pakistani government had unilaterally rescheduled, would be returned. Both the state leadership and the public were surprised by the Pakistani loan, signed by the then Foreign Minister Haris Silajdzic.
People speculated for a long time on what had really happened to the goods purchased with the loan, including some 60 expensive Toyota four-wheel-drive vehicles. Some said that an important role in the case was played by Silajdzic's sister Sadzida, the then Bosnia-Hercegovina ambassador to Pakistan. Silajdzic says that the goods that arrived in Bosnia-Hercegovina were pivotal in determining the course of the war.
[Silajdzic] These funds helped us defend ourselves. Sarajevo was defended when it was under attack. When it was supposed to be cut in half by tanks, we received anti-tank rockets that stopped this. The same happened in Bihac when it came under tank attack.
The question now is: who is unhappy about Sarajevo succeeding in defending itself, and about the character of the war in Bosnia-Hercegovina being changed? I don't know that.
[Reporter] Silajdzic sees the writing off of the debt as moral satisfaction and a noble gesture by the Pakistani government and people.
[Silajdzic] The Pakistani people and government demonstrated exceptional nobleness and generosity in those difficult times for Bosnia-Hercegovina. They were our friends. Likewise, now, when they have written off that debt, the government has again demonstrated its nobleness. As far as I'm concerned, I will never forget that.
[Reporter] This should finally wrap up the story about the famous Pakistani loan. But it remains unclear why the Bosnia-Hercegovina authorities have never disclosed precise information on how this loan was spent. Sanija Saljihi reporting for BH Radio 1.
Source: BBC Monitoring / BH Radio 1, Sarajevo
http://csees.net/?page=news&news_id=44243&country_id=
I would also like to add that a lot muslims from the UK went to bosnia,theres a documentary somewhere about it