
22 July 2008 Serbian Democratic Party members from Republika Srpska consider that the arrest of the former leader is shameful, adding that they do not believe that the Hague Tribunal is impartial.
The Serbian Democratic Party, SDS, which was led
by Radovan Karadzic for many years, is surprised by his arrest. Its members do
not believe that he will have a fair trial before the Hague Tribunal, which they
consider as "an anti-Serbian court".
"We are surprised.
The arrest of Radovan Karadzic comes as a consequence of the establishment of
new government in Serbia. In general, we do not trust the Hague Tribunal. We
consider that it does not bring justice, and, as proven so many times up to now,
this is a political court," says Mladen Bosic, current SDS president.
After having been
hiding for 13 years, Radovan Karadzic was arrested in the vicinity of Belgrade
on July 21.
The Hague Tribunal indicted Karadzic for
genocide, crime against humanity, violation of laws and practices of warfare
committed in Bosnia and Herzegovina, when he was president of Republika Srpska
and supreme commander of its armed forces.
He was the president of Republika Srpska from
December 1992 to July 1996. He was nominated to this position by the SDS, whose
president he was since 1990, when the party was formed, following democratic
changes and constitutional reforms in Bosnia.
Besides those who share Karadzic's political
ideas, members of the Serbian Radical Party of Republika Srpska and members of
"Vojislav Seselj's" Radical Party are disappointed by the arrest. Milanko
Mihajlica, President of the Serbian Radical Party, told reporters that
Karadzic's arrest represents "the biggest Serbian dishonor, misery and
orchestrated historical deception".
"The fact that Radovan Karadzic will be
extradited to the Hague Tribunal, which acquitted Ramush Haradinaj and Naser Oric
of all charges, basically indicates that Karadzic will not be extradited to a
court of justice, but rather to an anti-Serbian court, which will do whatever
Haris Silajdzic or Sulejman Tihic ask it to do. It will try Radovan Karadzic's
creations, and Republika Srpska is one of them," Mihajlica said.
Haris Silajdzic is President of the Bosnian
Presidency, while Sulejman Tihic is President of the Party for Democratic Action
and former member of the Bosnian State Presidency. Silajdzic and Tihic welcomed
Karadzic's arrest, saying that it meant "justice to the victims and the state of
Bosnia and Herzegovina."
Mirko Blagojevic, President of "Vojislav Seselj's"
Serbian Radical Party, says that he was "very upset" when he heard about the
arrest of Radovan Karadzic, adding that he tried to hide "tears from his
family".
"I was up all night. This is very hard. One
should not be ashamed of crying about a man like Radovan Karadzic, who will be
handed over to a political, anti-Serbian court," Blagojevic told Justice Report.
Blagojevic adding that the ICTY indictee Karadzic is
innocent, adding that everybody was innocent until proven otherwise. He said
that someone's innocence could be proven during the course of a normal criminal
proceeding, but this could not be done before a criminal court like the Hague
Tribunal.
"I must say that I
am unhappy. Those who feel happy today, do not have any reasons for that.
Karadzic did so many things to preserve peace in Bosnia and to save the Serbian
people, whose leader he once was," Blagojevic said, adding that he "stands ready
to help the Karadzic family in any way and to support Radovan's legal Defence at
the Hague Tribunal".
Karadzic was one of the founders of a separate
Serbian Assembly in Bosnia and Herzegovina on October 21, 1991. The Assembly
claimed to have represented the Serbian people in Bosnia. At that time several
"Serbian autonomous regions" were formed in Bosnia and Herzegovina. In November
1991 a referendum was convened, at which majority of Bosnian Serbs voted for
"remaining in a joint state, together with Serbia and Montenegro".
On January 9, 1992 the Bosnian Serbs Assembly,
controlled by the SDS, declared "The Republic of the Serbian People in Bosnia
and Herzegovina". On February 28, 1992 a constitution was passed, proclaiming
that the Republic would comprise the Serbian Autonomous Regions, municipalities
and other Serbian ethnic entities in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and it would remain
in the Yugoslav Federation.
Most Bosnian Serbs
decided to boycott the independence referendum, organised by the authorities of
Bosnia and Herzegovina.
A
short time after that, on May 13, 1992, Karadzic became the first president of
Bosnian Serbs, based in Pale, a town near Sarajevo, in which the Karadzic
family still lives.
Justice Report is a
specialist reporting agency focusing on war crimes trials taking place before
local courts; development of the local legal system; and efforts to come to
terms with the past.
Read more

Bosnian authorities have failed to provide access to justice and reparations for thousands of victims of rape and other sexual violence – says a report carried out by the Swiss organisation TRIAL.
Read more
Komentari:
Nema komentara.