US Blacklists Balkan Businessman Naser Kelmendi
By Valerie Hopkins
The White house has sanctioned suspected Kosovar Albanian Naser Kelmendi for drug trafficking, it announced Friday. US President Barack Obama notified Congress saying he had sanctioned Kelmendi under the Kingpin Act, implemented by the US Department of Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC).
Joining Kelmendi on the list was a Mexican national and an Afghan. All three were named in a one-sentence letter to congressional leaders signed by Obama in which he cited the power under the Kingpin Act to impose sanctions.
Kelmendi, 55, is a Kosovo-born citizen of
Kelmendi, his sons Elvis, Liridon, and Besnik, and his brother Becir own a number of businesses in
OCCRP has written extensively on Kelmendi publishing police reports connecting Kelmendi with two of Bosnia’s best known wartime military leaders, Naser Oric, a former commander of the defense of Srebrenica, and Nihad Bojadzic, Colonel of the Army of BiH. His best man is Muhamed Gasi, suspected of being a “capo of the Albanian mafia in
Kelmendi is being investigated in
Two others were sanctioned with Kelmendi. Jose Antonio Soto Gastelum, from the Mexican state Sinaloa, is suspected of being a leader of the eponymous cartel, and smuggling pot and crystal meth by the hundreds of pounds. The Treasury department said the Sinaloa cartel is responsible for hundreds of murders in southern
Sayid Wzir Shah, an Afghan national believed to be the second most important person in his country’s drug trade, is suspected of masterminding the movement of opium through
The release marks the 14th Kingpin Act determination announced by a president since June 2000, a Treasury spokesman said. The three designated Friday brings the total of drug kingpins to 97, he said.
All three of the men were added to the list following an interagency process involving numerous government agencies including the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), and the Defense, Homeland Security, Justice and State Departments.