PRISTINA (Reuters) - Kosovo police arrested a woman on Tuesday
accused of inciting terrorist acts for social media comments against the
United States over the killing of Iranian Commander Qassem Soleimani.
Police
said that Ikballe Berisha Huduti, the founder of a now defunct
pro-Islamic organization called Kur'ani, was arrested following an order
from the prosecution and she will remain in detention for 48 hours
awaiting a court decision.
Police said she was detained on charges of “incitement to commit a terrorist offence.”
Huduti wrote comments on her private Facebook page criticizing Washington after the U.S. forces killed Soleimani on Friday.
"By
killing the master of the house you have killed all members of the
family, then revenge is obligatory but it has no border," Huduti wrote,
according to Pristina media which had screenshots of her postings.
She
deleted her messages and said on Facebook that her words were taken out
of context by local media. She said in other postings she had praised
U.S. democracy and U.S. support for Kosovo in 1999 when conflict erupted
between ethnic Serbs and Albanians in the former Yugoslavia.
Showing
a photo of her with the former hard-line leader of Iran Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, media in Kosovo have described Huduti as a strong supporter
of the Iranian government. Her organization was closed by police in
2016. But she denied wrongdoing and there were never any charges against
her.
Kosovo has been a strong supporter of the United States.
When the Iranian general was killed, Kosovo Prime Minister Ramush
Haradinaj said: "Kosovo stands firm in support of the U.S. in its right
to self-defense."
(Reporting by Fatos Bytyci; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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