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ICTY/Bosnia: Start of Mladic Trial Shows Persistence Pays

Datum nieuwsfeit: 15-05-2012
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Dit is een authentiek persbericht Bron: Human Rights Watch


 

ICTY/Bosnia: Start of Mladic Trial Shows Persistence Pays


(Brussels) - The opening of the trial of Ratko Mladic, the Bosnian Serb wartime
military commander, is a salient reminder that justice catches up with those
accused of atrocity crimes. Mladic's trial for war crimes, crimes against
humanity, and genocide is scheduled to begin on May 16, 2012, before the
International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The Hague.

"Victims have waited nearly two decades to see Ratko Mladic in the dock," said
Param-Preet Singh, senior counsel in the International Justice Program at Human
Rights Watch. "His trial should lay to rest the notion that those accused of
atrocity crimes can run out the clock on justice."

On May 11, Mladic's defense team filed a last-minute motion to disqualify one
of the tribunal's judges, alleging possible bias, and to postpone the start of
the trial. No decision has been issued. The defense had previously asked the
judges five times to postpone the trial, but all five requests were refused.

The ICTY has charged Mladic, the commander of the Bosnian Serb Army during the
1992-1995 war in Bosnia, with two counts of genocide. One count relates to the
killings, rapes, torture, and other acts committed by Bosnian Serb forces
against Bosnian Muslims and Croats, beginning in 1992, the first year of the
war. The second genocide count relates to his alleged role in orchestrating the
slaughter by Bosnian Serb forces of at least 7,000 Bosnian Muslim men and boys
in July 1995, in the Bosnian city of Srebrenica. The Srebrenica genocide was
the worst crime on European soil since World War II.

The start of the Mladic trial follows on the heels of the verdict in April by
the Special Court for Sierra Leone, which found Liberia's former president,
Charles Taylor, guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity for atrocities
committed in Sierra Leone. Both trials are evidence of the growing
international trend to hold perpetrators of atrocities to account, no matter
how senior their position, Human Rights Watch said.

As with all international criminal tribunals, the ICTY lacks its own police
force and relies on state cooperation to arrest and surrender fugitives. The
arrest of Mladic in May 2011 was a significant victory for international
justice because it followed consistent European Union pressure on both Serbia
and Croatia to cooperate fully with the ICTY as a condition for closer ties.

The arrest already demonstrates concretely the value of principled EU
engagement for war crimes accountability, Human Rights Watch said. Serbia also
arrested the remaining ICTY fugitive, Goran Hadzic, in June 2011. None of the
ICTY's 161 indictees remain at large.

"Mladic's arrest after years on the lam shows what can be achieved when states
use their diplomatic muscle to enforce international justice," Singh said.
"Countries around the world should show similar resolve in pushing for the
arrest of suspects wanted by the International Criminal Court, including Bosco
Ntaganda, the rebel-leader-turned-army-general in the Democratic Republic of
Congo."

The UN Security Council created the ICTY in 1993 in response to credible
reports of atrocity crimes during the Bosnian war. The ICTY was the first
international court created to address atrocities on European soil since the
Nuremberg tribunal at the end of World War II.

Mladic's long-awaited trial comes as the ICTY is in the process of completing
its work, as mandated by the UN Security Council. Estimates as of December 2011
suggest that the trial of Radovan Karadzic, the Bosnian Serb wartime political
leader accused of being Mladic's co-architect in the Srebrenica genocide, is
expected to be completed in 2014. No dates have yet been given for the expected
completion of the Mladic and Hadzic trials.

It will be especially important for the tribunal to keep victims and affected
communities in Bosnia informed of developments in the courtroom, Human Rights
Watch said. Because Mladic is one of the most high-profile defendants on trial
for crimes during the Bosnian war, the tribunal will need financial support by
countries for effective outreach to bridge the gap between The Hague and
victims in Bosnia.

In addition to the charges stemming from the Srebrenica killings, Mladic faces
nine charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity for abuses committed by
Bosnian Serb forces during the conflict. Mladic and Karadzic were indicted in
1995. Karadzic eluded capture until July 2008. Mladic's case was officially
severed from Karadzic's in October 2009. Karadzic's trial before the Yugoslav
tribunal began the same month and is ongoing, with the defense set to begin
presenting its case in October 2012.

Prosecutors asked the court to separate Mladic's indictment into two parts -
one for events in Srebrenica, which would proceed first, and one for all other
crimes - in part to address unforeseen circumstances should his health
deteriorate. The judges rejected the request, saying that such concerns were
not supported by medical or other documentation. Prosecutors have since trimmed
Mladic's 11-count indictment which covered 196 separate crime scenes to 106.

The first genocide conviction by the tribunal was in August 2001 against
General Radislav Krstic, who was sentenced to 46 years in prison. Krstic was
second in command to Mladic at Srebrenica. In April 2004, the ICTY Appeals
Chamber reduced Krstic's sentence to 35 years, but confirmed that the
Srebrenica killings were genocide. On June 10, 2010, the ICTY also convicted
Vujadin Popovic, Chief of Security in the Drina Corps, a wartime Bosnian Serb
army unit, and Ljubisa Beara, chief of security of the Bosnian Serb Army's main
staff, on several accounts including genocide, extermination, murder, and
persecution and sentenced them both to life in prison.

Rejecting Bosnia's moves toward independence as Yugoslavia broke apart, from
April 1992 onwards Bosnian Serbs began seizing control of large areas in Bosnia
and Herzegovina, "ethnically cleansing" non-Serbs and subjecting them to
systematic violence and persecution. Non-Serbs also committed violations of
international humanitarian law. The conflict, which lasted from 1992 to 1995,
was characterized by grave violations of human rights such as mass killings,
rapes, widespread destruction, and displacement of populations. Following their
indictment in 1995, Mladic and Karadzic went into hiding. Both men were
eventually arrested in Serbia.

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More reporting on:

* Bosnia and Herzegovina,
* Croatia,
* Europe/Central Asia,
* Serbia,
* Judicial Accountability,
* War Crimes/Crimes Against Humanity,
* International Justice


 

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