
25 July 2008 Prosecution considering altering
indictment, which was last updated and consolidated eight years ago.
By: Merima Husejnovic (Sarajevo)
Prosecutors at The Hague are considering amending the
indictment against Radovan Karadzic “in line with new court practice and
evidence collected in the meantime,” Olga Kavran, a spokesperson, told Justice Report.
Although it has still not been
decided which prosecutor will cover the case, Kavran said the prosecution was
“prepared” for Karadzic’s trial, while adding that it was premature to mention
potential witnesses.
“The team is scrutinizing the
indictment and considering the need to harmonize it with the court practice
adopted in the meantime and the collected evidence,” she said.
“After all, it has been eight years
since it was filed. In procedural terms, if the prosecution determines that the
indictment needs to be changed it will be sent to judges for their confirmation
and final decision. The indictment filed in 2000 remains valid until such
time.”
The first indictments against
Karadzic, containing 36 counts, were filed by Chief Prosecutor Richard
Goldstone in July and November 1995. Chief Prosecutor Carla Del Ponte joined
the two indictments into a single indictment, containing 11 counts, in 2000.
Karadzic is charged with genocide,
complicity in genocide, crimes against humanity, violation of laws and
practices of warfare and grave breach of the Geneva Conventions.
He is charged also with having
“planned, abetted, ordered, committed and supported the destruction of
national, ethnic, racial or religious groups of Bosniaks and Croats”.
The indictment mentions Momcilo
Krajisnik and Biljana Plavsic as his closest associates. The Hague Prosecution
alleges that they were all members of the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces
of the Serbian Republic as of 1992.
After admitting her own guilt,
Plavsic, one of the principal Bosnian Serb wartime leaders, was sentenced to 11
years’ imprisonment, having been convicted of crimes against humanity.
Krajisnik, another wartime leader of
Bosnian Serbs, was sentenced under a first instance verdict to 27 years. The
verdict acquitted him of responsibility for genocide and complicity in
genocide.
The Prosecution of Bosnia and Herzegovina has
filed several indictments charging former senior officials of the Serbian
Democratic Party, SDS, and the Republika Srpska, RS, with a joint criminal
enterprise conducted in collaboration with Radovan Karadzic.
His name is mentioned in the
indictment against Gojko Klickovic, Jovan Ostojic and Mladen Drljaca,
charged over crimes committed in the Bosanska Krupa area.
The indictment alleges that members
of the joint criminal enterprise aimed at creating “a separate state of Bosnian
Serbs, from which most non-Serbian residents would be permanently evicted”.
During the war, Karadzic was
president of Republika Srpska and member of the Supreme Command of the RS armed
forces. The indictment alleges that Bosnian Serb forces, the SDS and other
government authorities acted under his leadership and control.
The indictment further alleges that
from 1991 to 1995, Karadzic planned and ordered a protracted campaign of
shelling and sniping directed against civilians in Sarajevo, “inflicting terror upon its citizens”.
The siege of Sarajevo lasted 1,425 days in
total. Data collected by the Research and Documentation
Center in Sarajevo
suggests more than 13,000 people died in Sarajevo
in the course of the war, while 750 are still missing. These figures are not
final.
“Because of the shelling and sniping
against civilians, the life of every Sarajevo
inhabitant became a daily struggle to survive. Without gas, electricity or
running water, people were forced to venture outside to find basic living
necessities. Each time they did, whether to collect wood, fetch water or buy
some bread, they risked death,” the indictment says.
| Sarajevska ruza |
The Hague Tribunal considers the
massacres of people at Sarajevo’s Markale market
the gravest of all the crimes committed in Sarajevo. Dozens of shoppers were killed or
wounded when the market place was bombed on August 28, 1995.
The Trial Chamber sentenced Dragomir
Milosevic, former commander of Sarajevo-Romanija Corps, to 33 years’
imprisonment for this atrocity.
On the basis of evidence presented
during the main trial, the Chamber determined that the grenade that hit Markale
was fired from Republika Srpska Army, VRS, positions, thus rejecting defence
claims that the Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina staged the massacre in
a bid to trigger international
intervention.
In 1994, Milosevic took over the
command of the corps from General Stanislav Galic, who was sentenced by the
Hague Tribunal to life imprisonment for the siege of Sarajevo.
The forces allegedly led by Karadzic
undertook a series of actions aiming at “significant reduction of the number of
Bosniaks, Croats and other non-Serb” in those areas declared as part of RS, the
indictment alleges. It says Bosnian Serb forces managed to “secure physical
control” , among others, 41 of Bosnia’s
municipalities.
“The SDS and the local authorities
established detention camps and prisons in those municipalities. Following the
attacks on those municipalities, the Bosnian Serb forces gathered tens of
thousands of Bosnian Muslims and Croats, and forced them to walk to the
concentration centres. From those centres they were transferred to detention
camps and prisons,” the indictment alleges.
Some of these detention camps
included the Vuk Karadzic school building in Bratunac, eastern Bosnia, Manjaca in
Banja Luka, north-west Bosnia, Batkovic in Bijeljina, north-east Bosnia, Luka
in Brcko, northern Bosnia, Percin disko in Doboj, northern Bosnia, the
Correctional Facility in Foca, easern Bosnia, Omarska, Keraterm and Trnopolje
in Prijedor, north-west Bosnia and
Susica in Vlasenica, eastern Bosnia.
“Detainees lived in an atmosphere of
constant fear, which was further incited by brutal treatment of randomly
selected victims,” the indictment reads. “Detainees were constantly exposed to
physical, mental and sexual abuse, as well as other forms of degrading and
humiliating circumstances, which represented a fundamental attacks against
their humanity.”
The prosecution insists that
Karadzic exercised overall control and authority over the soldiers and police
who worked in and managed the detention camps and prisons.
According to statements given by
witnesses at the trial of Momcilo Mandic before the Court of Bosnia and
Herzegovina, Karadzic personally visited some of the detention camps to “check
what the conditions were like”.
In July 2007, a first instance
verdict was pronounced against Mandic, a former justice minister in Karadzic’s
government, acquitting him of the charges for crimes against humanity and civilians.
Among other things, the State Prosecution had charged him with setting up and
running the detention camps in the RS.
The Hague Prosecution charges
Karadzic with genocide committed in Bosnia and Herzegovina and
Srebrenica in particular, in July 1995, when this eastern Bosnian town was a
protected zone, under a decision made by the UN Security Council.
“Radovan Karadzic, as supreme
commander, ordered the Bosnian Serb forces to create impossible conditions of
life, involving complete uncertainty, which did not give any hope for survival
to citizens, in particular those living in Srebrenica,” the Prosecution
considers.
One part of the indictment describes
how the Bosnian Serb forces executed thousands of men in “an organized and
systematic way” at various locations in Srebrenica and its vicinity from July
11 to July 18, 1995. One location
mentioned in the indictment is the Agricultural Cooperative at Kravica, where
more than 1,000 Bosniaks were killed on July 13, 1995.
| Kravica |
11
former policemen and RS soldiers are charged with this crime before the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
“Radovan Karadzic knew or had the
reason to know that the forces, which acted under his leadership and control,
committed those crimes, and he failed to undertake the necessary and reasonable
measures to punish the perpetrators of those crimes,” the indictment alleges.
Following his arrest in Belgrade on July 21, 2008, it is expected
that Karadzic will be extradited shortly to the tribunal.
Merima Husejnovic is BIRN BIRN – Justice Report journalist. merima@birn.eu.com. Justice Report is weekly online BIRN publication.
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.
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