November 29, 2012

Belgrade accuses war crimes court of bias against Serbs

Belgrade accuses war crimes court of bias against Serbs

November 29, 2012 01:56 PM

Serbia's new president Tomislav Nikolic gestures as he arrives at the parliament building to take his oath of office in Belgrade May 31, 2012. (REUTERS/Marko Djurica)

BELGRADE: Serbian President Tomislav Nikolic angrily accused the UN war crimes tribunal of bias against Serbs after the acquittal Thursday of former Kosovo prime minister Ramush Haradinaj on charges of murder and torture during the 1990s war.

"The tribunal, apparently created outside international law, was set up to try the Serbian people," Nikolic said in a statement. "Nobody will be convicted for the terrible crimes against Kosovo Serbs."

The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The Hague acquitted Haradinaj and two others on charges of murdering and torturing Serbs and non-Albanians during Kosovo's 1998-99 war for independence from Belgrade.

The verdict was issued less then two weeks after the ICTY cleared two Croatian generals, Ante Gotovina and Mladen Markac, of war crimes against Serbs during the 1991-1995 war in Croatia in a verdict that also infuriated Belgrade.

Thursday's ruling is "a severe blow to international justice and justice in general. It is a defeat of the international mission in Kosovo," said Serbian government spokesman Milivoje Mihajlovic, saying the mission failed to protect witnesses in the case.

"The Hague tribunal has legalised mafia rule in Kosovo, above all, the omerta, the law of silence which still prevails and is stronger than any crime," he told AFP, referring to alleged witness intimidation during the Haradinaj trial.

Nikolic said the ruling would complicate EU-mediated dialogue aimed at normalising relations between Belgrade and Pristina, which unilaterally proclaimed independence for ethnic-Albanian dominated Kosovo in 2008.

Among ethnic Serbs on trial at the ICTY are Bosnian Serb wartime political and army chiefs Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic while Serbian strongman Slobodan Milosevic died in March 2006 during his trial for war crimes committed during the bloody breakup of the former Yugoslavia.

Six top former Serbian military and police officials have been sentenced for war crimes during the Kosovo conflict between ethnic Albanian separatist guerrillas and Belgrade security forces under Milosevic's command.

No high-ranking official from any other ethnic communities has been sentenced for crimes against the Serbs during the Balkans wars.

 

http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/International/2012/Nov-29/196541-belgrade-accuses-war-crimes-court-of-bias-against-serbs.ashx

U.N. Court Frees Former Leader of Kosovo

U.N. Court Frees Former Leader of Kosovo

 

Valdrin Xhemaj/European Pressphoto Agency

Kosovar Albanians in Pristina celebrated after the decision on Thursday.

By MARLISE SIMONS

Published: November 29, 2012

PARIS — A United Nations war crimes tribunal on Thursday acquitted the former prime minister of Kosovo, Ramush Haradinaj, for the second time of torturing and killing Serb civilians while he was a commander of the NATO-backed Kosovo Liberation Army during its fight for independence in 1999.

Pool photo by Reuters

The former prime minister of Kosovo, Ramush Haradinaj, in The Hague courtroom on Thursday.

Two of his comrades, Idriz Balaj and Lahi Brahimaj, were also acquitted, although Mr. Brahimaj has already served a six-year sentence for torture handed down in an earlier trial. The judges ordered the three men released immediately.

Supporters cheered and applauded in the courtroom's public gallery in The Hague, where proceedings were broadcast via video stream.

The men were expected to return later in the day to Kosovo, where Mr. Haradinaj's supporters — even before the verdict — said they hoped he would return to politics. In Serbia, which is involved in crucial talks with Kosovo, a former Serbian province before the war, the decision was expected to provoke a wave of angry reactions.

Earlier this month, the tribunal enraged the Belgrade government and many Serbs, when an appeals chamber threw out the convictions of two Croatian generals, Ante Gotovina and Mladen Markac. They led a 1995 military campaign that recaptured Serb-occupied Croatian land and drove more than 150,000 Serbs from Croatia.

While the acquittal of Mr. Haradinaj was greeted with celebration in Pristina, where he is seen as a hero, in Belgrade Serbs reacted with anger and disappointment.

President Tomislav Nikolic of Serbia, a nationalist who has long been skeptical of the Hague process, said in a statement that the ruling showed that the United Nations tribunal for the former Yugoslavia was "apparently contrary to international law" and had been "formed to try the Serbian people" for the wars of the 1990s. He said that now "nobody will be convicted for the horrible crimes against Kosovo Serbs." He said the ruling would undermine reconciliation in the region, stoke an anti-European Union backlash in Serbia and hinder progress in the already fraught talks between Belgrade and Pristina over Kosovo.

Progress in the talks is seen in Brussels as an important step for Serbia to advance in its aspirations to join the European Union. Prime minister Ivica Dacic said the acquittal was just the latest in the tribunal's politically motivated verdicts, but that continuing talks with Kosovo would be in Serbia's "best interest."

The decisions of the Croatian and now the Kosovo convictions are seen as serious setbacks for the prosecution. It has said in recent days that it will seek a review of the Croatian appeals ruling, in which two of the five judges wrote unusually sharp dissents.

One judge bluntly called the acquittal of the Croatian generals "grotesque" and wrote that the findings of the majority "contradict any sense of justice."

Inevitably, the acquittals of the Croatian generals and now the Kosovo fighters have provoked criticism that the verdicts were politically inspired, because the military men from both countries were backed by the West.

The Croatian campaign of 1995 was planned with the help of active and retired American military advisers.

The Kosovo Liberation Army was openly backed by NATO, which led the Kosovo war.

But lawyers working for the tribunal have said that the case against the Kosovo fighters was fraught from the start.

Before Mr. Haradinaj's indictment in 2005, lawyers in the prosecution office cautioned repeatedly that there was not enough evidence to build a case against him. But some prosecutors argued that the tribunal needed to try hard to include suspects from other ethnic groups in the list of overwhelmingly Serbian suspects.

Mr. Haradinaj, at the time prime minister of United Nations administered Kosovo, became the most senior Kosovo Albanian to be criminally charged. Carla del Ponte, the tribunal's chief prosecutor who indicted him in 2005, called him a "gangster in uniform" and accused him and two of his lieutenants of crimes against humanity, including murder, torture, rape and expulsion of civilians, including Serbs, Albanians and Gypsies.

Mr. Haradinaj, who had just served 100 days in office and was popular as a freedom fighter at home, agreed to step down and surrendered to The Hague to face his first trial.

It seemed like an abrupt end to a wide-ranging career that had included a stint in the Yugoslav Army and almost a decade as an immigrant in Switzerland where he worked as a nightclub bouncer, carpenter and martial arts teacher. By the time he joined the Kosovo separatist rebellion against Serbia, he had taught himself English and German, read books on guerrilla tactics, and soon established himself as a zone commander in the rebel army.

Before traveling to face trial The Hague, Mr. Haradinaj said he was innocent of the charges and his indictment was "a result of the trade-off that some have made with the Serbian government" to make sure that Belgrade would extradite high-ranking Serbian war crimes suspects. Tribunal officials declined to comment.

Mr. Haradinaj was cleared of the charges in 2008, after prosecutors had called for a 20-year sentence. But an appeals court overturned the verdict and ordered a retrial in 2010, saying that extensive intimidation witnesses had led to a miscarriage of justice.

It was the tribunal's first retrial, and it concluded with Thursday's acquittal.

Judges said they found that crimes had indeed occurred, that 16 civilians had been abducted and mistreated in the rebels' Jablanica prison camp and eight civilians had been killed in captivity. But the judges said they had not found sufficient evidence that the accused had directly participated in the crimes or could otherwise be held criminally responsible.

Dan Bilefsky contributed reporting.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/30/world/europe/un-court-frees-former-leader-of-kosovo.html

November 27, 2012

The West conceals the real truth about Srebrenica and Kosovo

Poggi: The West conceals the real truth about Srebrenica and Kosovo

Mon, 11/26/2012 - 15:37 -- MRS

 

In a text for L'Opinione, a Swiss MP, Donatello Poggi, emphasizes that many events in the Balkans in the 1990s were actually the results of a propaganda and that the West is hiding the truth about the numerous Serbs killed in Srebrenica and Kosovo. In the period from 1992 to 1995, 3,280 Serbs, 70 of whom civilians, were killed in the region of Srebrenica and all the victims are known by their full names, writes Poggi. The other massacre, that of the Bosnian Muslims, contains many unclear aspects in terms of the number of victims, as many lies have been disclosed, such as the presence of victims that had nothing to do with Srebrenica, Poggi underlines. Those facts have been systematically concealed by Muslim politicians, NATO member-states and the Western media, he writes. As for Kosovo, Poggi wonders whether anyone remembers the so-called massacre of Kosovo Albanian civilians, allegedly committed by the Yugoslav Army. How many people have become aware so far of the fact that those alleged civilians were actually members of the KLA killed in battle, whereas the head of the international observing group was none other than a CIA agent, William Walker. It was he who ordered that the killed KLA terrorists be dressed as civilians, thus creating the long-awaited opportunity for the declaration of war to FR Yugoslavia, writes Poggi. No one remembers any more the horrible Croatian Storm operation, of 4 August 1995, when the Croatian army, with 150,000 soldiers, attacked the Serb Krajina and ethnically cleansed it of Serbs. Those who organized that ethnic cleansing, namely the Storm operation, were, like the KLA, criminals financed by the CIA and by Albanians from all over the world, emphasizes Poggi.

 

 

http://voiceofserbia.org/content/poggi-west-conceals-real-truth-about-srebrenica-and-kosovo

November 23, 2012

CRO generals found "found not guilty" -Dr. Vojin Joksimovich, Modern Tokyo Times: Fantastic

 

 

... My speculation is that the American judge acted upon the State Department instructions and swayed opinions of the other two judges. Judge Meron is probably the most influential ICTY judge having served two terms as the president. He joined the Tribunal in 2003 after serving in the US State Department. His anti-Serb bias has been well known. There are numerous examples when he violated human and process rights of the Serbian inductees' and those of Vojislav Seselj's in particular. He banned even his telephone communications and visits. He was a member of the Appeals Chamber, which freed thuggish Naser Oric, who as a Muslim commander of Srebrenica, was responsible for the murder of 1,300 Serbs and who boasted for his crimes in an interview with the Toronto Star in 1995. ...

 

[ Excellent 'speculation'. Read in entirety. ]

 

 

Another fantastic article by Dr. Vojin Joksimovich - whereby another barbaric decision was recently made which merely confirms that killing Serbs was fine because it met the US/NATO agenda.

Also, now over 11,350 members on twitter at https://twitter.com/mtt_news MODERN TOKYO TIMES

 

November 16, 2012

Serbia blasts UN war tribunal after court clears Croatia generals of crimes against Serbians

 

Serbia blasts UN war tribunal after court clears Croatia generals of crimes against Serbians

  • Ante Gotovina and Mladen Markac showed no emotion at the decision
  • Sentenced to 25 and 18 years in 2011 for crimes, including murder
  • Deputy PM Rasim Ljajic condemned ruling saying tribunal had 'lost all its credibility'
  • Decision is one of the most significant reversals in court's 18-year history

By David Williams

PUBLISHED: 19:28 GMT, 16 November 2012 | UPDATED: 19:29 GMT, 16 November 2012

 

Judges at the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal have controversially overturned the convictions of two Croat generals for crimes committed against Serbian civilians,.

The decision has sparked an outcry in Serbia where politicans accused the court of 'selective justice'.

Deputy Prime Minister Rasim Ljajic condemned the ruling, saying the tribunal had 'lost all its credibility' amid warnings the ruling raised questions about the handling of cases in The Hague and could bring into the open the thinly concealed animosity between the two Balkan neighbours.

 

 

Controversial: Judges have overturned the convictions of Ante Gotovina (left) and Mladen Markac (right) for crimes committed against Serbian civilians. The decision has been met with anger in Serbia

'What happened (in the court) is a testimony to the selective justice which is worse than any injustice,' he declared.

The decision, by a 3-2 majority in the five judge appeals chamber, is one of the most significant reversals in the court's 18-year history and overturns a verdict that dealt a blow to Croatia's self-image as a victim of atrocities, rather than a perpetrator, during the Balkan wars in the 1990s.

 

Neither Ante Gotovina nor Mladen Markac showed any emotion at the decision, but their supporters in the court's packed public gallery cheered and clapped as Presiding Judge Theodor Meron ordered both men freed immediately.

Gotovina and Markac were sentenced to 24 and 18 years respectively in 2011 for crimes, including murder and deportation. Judges ruled both men were part of a criminal conspiracy led by former Croat President Franjo Tudjman to expel Serbs.

 

No credibility: Deputy Prime Minister Rasim Ljajic condemned the ruling

But the appeals judges said prosecutors failed to prove the existence of such as conspiracy, effectively clearing Croatia's entire wartime leadership of war crimes in the operation known as Operation Storm.

Some 600 Serbs were killed and more than 200,000 were driven from their homes during the operation when Croat forces retook the Krajina region.

Gotovina's and Markac's convictions were one of the few at the tribunal set up in 1994 to punish perpetrators of atrocities against Serb civilians.

Gotovina is especially popular among Croatian nationalists. The charismatic former soldier fought in the French Foreign Legion in the 1980s and spent four years on the run from justice before being captured in the Canary Islands in December 2005.

The verdicts against the two generals had triggered anti-Western sentiments among nationalist Croatians ahead of the country's planned European Union entry in July 2013.

After the convictions last year, thousands of Croatian war veterans massed in Zagreb and ripped EU flags and denounced Croatia's leaders who have made EU membership their goal.

Yesterday there was jubilation in the Croat capital Zagreb where thousands of people - many dressed as war veterans - burst into applause after the verdict was announced.

'Our generals are heroes because they risked their lives to save our country and liberate the people,' student Andjela Anic, 26, said.

But in Belgrade, the Serbian capital, the acquittals enraged hard line opponents of the U.N. court in who accuse its judges of anti-Serb bias - a kanagaroo court, they say, whose main aim was to vilify and convict Serbs.

Serbian President Tomislav Nikolic said : 'It is now quite clear the tribunal has made a political decision and not a legal ruling. The ruling will not contribute to the stabilisation of the situation in the region and will open old wounds.'



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2234136/Serbia-blasts-UN-war-tribunal-court-clears-Croatia-generals-crimes-Serbians.html#ixzz2CQ3XfHvo
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November 02, 2012

U.S.'s Clinton, EU's Ashton To Finish Off The Balkans

 

http://english.ruvr.ru/2012_11_01/EU-US-officials-attend-to-unfinished-business-in-the-Balkans/

Voice of Russia
November 1, 2012

EU,US officials attend to 'unfinished business' in the Balkans
Andrey Fedyashin and Vitaly Radnayev

====

During the bombardments of Serbia, NATO resorted to the so-called "method of humanitarian intervention" which received a widespread use in Libya later on. But for Russia's and China's veto in the UN Security Council, the US and NATO would be happy to repeat the "Serbian scenario" in Syria.

Neither NATO nor the EU want to recall what this unilateral support cost the Serbs and what ethnic cleansing took place in all former republics of Yugoslavia. 300,000 Serbs were driven out of Croatia, 350,000 out of Kosovo. Thousands of Serbian homes, churches and monasteries were burned.

====

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and the EU's High Representative for Foreign and Security Policy Catherine Ashton have visited Bosnia, Serbia and Kosovo since the beginning of the week and are currently winding up a tour of Montenegro and Macedonia in what a US State Department spokesman has described as an attempt to put the finishing touches to "the unfinished business in the Balkans".

For Hillary Clinton, this so-called "unfinished business" is akin to "family business". During the presidency of her husband, Bill Clinton, NATO and the EU conducted military operations on the territory of former Yugoslavia. NATO took the side of one of the parties to the civil war in Yugoslavia which broke out in the 1990s. During the bombardments of Serbia, NATO resorted to the so-called "method of humanitarian intervention" which received a widespread use in Libya later on. But for Russia's and China's veto in the UN Security Council, the US and NATO would be happy to repeat the "Serbian scenario" in Syria.

The current tour of the Balkans has been triggered by Brussels' and NATO's fears over Russia's progressive cooperation with Serbia, Alexander Karasev of the Institute of Slavic Studies says.

"Serbia's current leadership and President Tomislav Nikolic in particular, are looking to Russia for further economic and political cooperation. Even though certain circles within the EU are far from happy about it, it's a reality to be reckoned with".

Belgrade will be coming under more and more pressure as US and EU leaders try to force their own variant of a Kosovo settlement on it. This opinion belongs to Slavonic scholar Yelena Guskova.

"The current influx of US and EU officials into the Balkans means that Serbia is going to come under more pressure. Belgrade is invited to join the EU. Membership in NATO is not on the agenda because about 60% of Serbia's population is against it".

The most common misjudgment of the bloody time of the 1990s is a belief that NATO planes launched the bombardments of Serbia in 1999, because of Kosovo. Nothing of the sort. NATO began to drop bombs on Serb positions in Bosnia-Herzegovina in 1995, with the participation of German Air Force planes.

Neither NATO nor the EU want to recall what this unilateral support cost the Serbs and what ethnic cleansing took place in all former republics of Yugoslavia. 300,000 Serbs were driven out of Croatia, 350,000 out of Kosovo. Thousands of Serbian homes, churches and monasteries were burned.

According to US newspaper reports, Mrs.Clinton's visit to the Balkans will become the last of her tenure as Secretary of State as she will leave the post at the beginning of 2013. Experts don't rule out that she might run for president in the 2016 elections.

Clinton headed for Algeria and Balkans next week

US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton will travel to Algeria to discuss the Mali crisis and to the Balkan states to express support, the Department of State has released today.

The released statement also says that Clinton will meet Algeria's president Abdelaziz Bouteflika to discuss in detail the recently adopted UN Security Council resolution authorizing West African States to perform a military intervention to oust Islamist rebels from the north of Mali.

Afterwards the Secretary of State will make her way to Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Kosovo "to demonstrate the enduring US interest, commitment and support for (the Balkans') future in the European and Euro-Atlantic community."

The top US diplomat will be joined there by Catherine Ashton, the European Union's foreign policy chief.

In Belgrade and Pristina, Clinton and Ashton will "reiterate US-EU resolve for Serbia and Kosovo to build on previous agreements and advance their dialogue, as well as to encourage concrete steps that will allow those countries to progress on their respective paths to EU membership," the State Department said.

Clinton will end her tour in Croatia and Albania.