The Mladic Case

Jun 07, 2011 No Comments by

This article was originally published on Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso on June 2, 2011, by Andrea Rossini.  The interview was taken on June 1, 2011, and first published in the Italian original version on June 3.

What can we expect from Mladic as a defendant? Will he try to lengthen the trial, to politicize it, or will he answer to the judges as a soldier, with his diaries in hand?

It is difficult for me to assess beforehand. I believe he will follow Milosevic and Karadzic, not recognizing the Court, and that he will want to conduct the defense by himself. In the first stage he will not declare himself innocent or guilty, in order to gain one more month [ this is what actually happened, ndr ]. He will try to slow down the pace of the trial, this is for sure.

You have been conducting the Prosecution in the Milosevic trial. How close was Mladic to the former President of Serbia?

Very close. Both him and Karadzic were. Our witnesses, who were insiders, people who were present, had told us that both Karadzic and Mladic would go and report to Milosevic, in Belgrade, once a week. The whole organization of the genocide was carried out by those three people plus others who would take part in the meetings. Mladic was the one responsible for executing the genocide in Srebrenica, he was there. UN reports warned that, even though it was a safe area, Mladic was getting ready. Indeed, he did it. Mladic is the executor of this genocidal plan. His position is extremely serious.

Carla Del Ponte

Carla Del Ponte

With Mladic no longer on the run, when the last trials still pending before the Hague Tribunal will be completed it will be up to the local Courts to answer the demand for justice for the crimes of the ‘90s. Can they do it?

They are already doing it, in Zagreb, in Belgrade and in Sarajevo. In Sarajevo there is a Court that is still mixed, with both international and national Judges. In Zagreb and Belgrade there are national Judges who are carrying out the trials for war crimes and crimes against humanity, and they are supported both by the Court of The Hague and – especially Belgrade – by the United States.

In Republika Srpska a referendum was called for, then called off, against the Bosnian State Court and Prosecutor’s Office. Do you trust these institutions?

The Sarajevo Court is a mixed Court, already controlled from the inside by the foreign Judges that are part of it. Bosnia’s problem, now, is a political problem, not so much a judicial one.

In other words, these institutions in Bosnia are capable of doing their job, they work efficiently?

Yes.

Moving on to Kosovo, why do you believe the investigation on the KLA crimes highlighted in your book “The Hunt” and in the Marty report should be conducted by the UN and not by Eulex?

Eulex is on the ground, very close to the [local] political clout. Also, Eulex has no jurisdiction outside Kosovo borders. If I think back to that mass grave we had had indication of in Albania, for instance, Eulex could not operate there, it does not have jurisdiction. Moreover, Eulex does not have an efficient witness protection program. These are the main reasons, and the reasons that also Senator Dick Marty has already widely expressed.

International, politics

About the author

Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso (OBC) is a research and electronic media centre devoted to social and political change in Southeastern Europe (The Balkans), Turkey, and the Caucasus region. The OBC team, based in Rovereto (Trento - Italy), cooperates with a network of over 40 correspondents and local contributors to deliver daily online articles and in-depth analysis on these areas. Occasionally GreenGoPost.com will reprint articles from OBC, which is one of the best news sources on these vibrant yet challenged regions. Please visit OBC's site at http://www.balcanicaucaso.org/eng
No Responses to “The Mladic Case”

Leave a Reply

Subscribe to comments.