"Karadžić took my face and energy"

Miracle healer Petar Glumac (78) from Novo Selo in Banat claims that Radovan Karadžić took over “his face and energy”.

Izvor: Tanjug

Sunday, 27.07.2008.

15:06

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Miracle healer Petar Glumac (78) from Novo Selo in Banat claims that Radovan Karadzic took over “his face and energy”. On Saturday evening, the Austrian police gave their own “confirmation of identity change”, announcing that the Petar Glumac taken into custody last year was not Karadzic after all, but rather a man bearing a striking similarity to the former Bosnian Serb leader as he appeared in photos released immediately after his arrest. "Karadzic took my face and energy" Novo Selo locals say that Glumac is a “real attraction”, adding that they now have “their own Dr. Dabic". Glumac says that he is a miracle healer with many years’ experience, that he has a Serbian and Croatian passport, and that he lives in Novo Selo, near Pancevo. “I wear glasses, I have a long grey beard, moustache and I have a ponytail,” he explains. The difference between his hair and that of Karadzic’s is that he lets his ponytail hang loose. “Everything else is 1000 percent the same,” claims Glumac, stating that he has practiced alternative medicine and miracle healing for over 23 years, and that it was he whom Austrian police questioned in Vienna last year. He claims that he still travels a lot despite his advanced years to Italy, Germany, and Austria. “I treat all illnesses, and female infertility is my specialty. I have treated over 800 infertile women, 90 percent of whom later gave birth to healthy children,” he says. On Saturday, Vienna daily Oesterreich wrote that the Hague’s most wanted fugitive had spent time in Vienna, working as a miracle doctor, going by the name of Pera. The same evening, Austrian police stated that the Petar Glumac that they had questioned in Vienna was not Karadzic, and that the man in question had merely borne a strong resemblance to the war crimes suspect, as he looked in the photo released on Tuesday. Viennese police questioned Glumac in connection with a murder committed by a man that he was staying with in Vienna. Radovan Karadzic as he looked during his years on the run (B92, archive)

"Karadžić took my face and energy"

Novo Selo locals say that Glumac is a “real attraction”, adding that they now have “their own Dr. Dabić".

Glumac says that he is a miracle healer with many years’ experience, that he has a Serbian and Croatian passport, and that he lives in Novo Selo, near Pančevo. “I wear glasses, I have a long grey beard, moustache and I have a ponytail,” he explains.

The difference between his hair and that of Karadžić’s is that he lets his ponytail hang loose.

“Everything else is 1000 percent the same,” claims Glumac, stating that he has practiced alternative medicine and miracle healing for over 23 years, and that it was he whom Austrian police questioned in Vienna last year.

He claims that he still travels a lot despite his advanced years to Italy, Germany, and Austria. “I treat all illnesses, and female infertility is my specialty. I have treated over 800 infertile women, 90 percent of whom later gave birth to healthy children,” he says.

On Saturday, Vienna daily Oesterreich wrote that the Hague’s most wanted fugitive had spent time in Vienna, working as a miracle doctor, going by the name of Pera.

The same evening, Austrian police stated that the Petar Glumac that they had questioned in Vienna was not Karadžić, and that the man in question had merely borne a strong resemblance to the war crimes suspect, as he looked in the photo released on Tuesday.

Viennese police questioned Glumac in connection with a murder committed by a man that he was staying with in Vienna.

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