A Murder Plotted and Paid For in a Revolving Restaurant
The twisting Avaz tower that looms over Sarajevo is the headquarters of Fahrudin Radoncic, an intense and dapper former media mogul who is running for president of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
To Sejla Turkovic, Fahrudin “Fahro” Radoncic was a friend, a mentor, a confidante, a great boss. And no, she says, they were never lovers.
Ramiz “Celo” Delalic was a well-known and popular guy in Bosnia and Herzegovina for his military service during the war, respected for his fierce defense of Sarajevo, both overt and covert. He was also a mobster, and that’s what got him killed.
Naser Kelmendi likes to portray himself as a simple, self-made businessman who owned a few nice properties and an ice cream factory, with some friends in high places in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
From his early days as a trader from Kosovo to his arrest as a drug kingpin charged with supplying heroin and pills throughout Europe, Naser Kelmendi built an empire that amassed millions. Now he awaits trial in a Kosovo jail, accused of the murder of Ramiz "Celo" Delalic.