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UN says Karadzic is in Belgrade
BBC News ^ | February 11, 2004

Posted on 02/11/2004 3:18:37 PM PST by HAL9000

Ex-Bosnian Serb leader and indicted war criminal Radovan Karadzic is living in Belgrade, according to chief United Nations prosecutor Carla Del Ponte.

Ms Del Ponte said she had received information from a credible source in the Serb capital last week.

She described Belgrade as "a haven for fugitives", adding that her office's relations with Serbia had been frozen.

Mr Karadzic, charged with genocide for his part in the Bosnian war, remains free eight years after the war ended.

Ms Del Ponte said he had apparently joined his former army chief Ratko Mladic in the Serbian capital.

"So we have now both our most high level (people) responsible for the crimes committed, Mladic and Karadzic, in Serbia," she said.

Ms Del Ponte also criticised Serbian authorities for failing to co-operate with UN authorities.

"We must say at this time co-operation is frozen," she said.

"Belgrade is now a safe haven for fugitives."

She added that around 15 war crimes suspects remained on the run in Serbia - and she did not know how to get them arrested and transferred to The Hague.



TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: balkans; belgrade; bosnia; karadzic; radovankaradzic; serbia; warcrimes

1 posted on 02/11/2004 3:18:38 PM PST by HAL9000
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To: HAL9000
War crime suspects may avoid tribunal

Ian Traynor in the Hague
Wednesday February 11, 2004
The Guardian

Some war crimes suspects in the former Yugoslavia are likely to escape international justice because of a drive by Washington, with strong British backing, to curb the powers of Carla Del Ponte, the chief prosecutor at the war crimes tribunal in The Hague.
Under American plans to reconfigure the way power is wielded at the tribunal, judges would decide who goes into the dock, for the first time in the court's 10-year history.

Tribunal judges are blocking indictments submitted by Ms Del Ponte, sources said, while awaiting the outcome of the power struggle which could see far fewer suspects tried.

Ms Del Ponte is angry at the fresh attempt to rein her in, after she was taken off the war crimes tribunal for Rwanda last year.

A draft security council resolution by Britain, which is opposed by Russia, France, and Germany, would transfer some of her powers to the tribunal's judges, jeopardising the freedom and independence of the investigation and prosecution service at the tribunal. Critics said the move was an attack on Ms Del Ponte because of her refusal to bow to political pressure.

They said the prosecutor's office had gained great expertise during the last 10 years, while the judges in The Hague are not qualified to decide who should be tried.

Richard Dicker of Human Rights Watch said: "This is clearly an attack on the prosecutor. They want to put the prosecutor on a very short leash."

The security council decided last year, under pressure from the US, to close the tribunal on former Yugoslavia by 2010. Ms Del Ponte has to complete all trials by 2008 and issue indictments by the end of this year.

She has already reduced the scope of her investigations and hopes to charge about 25 suspects by the end of the year.

But Judge Theodor Meron, the tribunal's president, said that some of those indictments may be thrown out, not on the usual grounds of prima facie evidence, but because the suspects were not senior enough.

"If the security council wants the judges to scrutinise prosecutorial decisions, the judges can't do that without a clear mandate," he told the Guardian in an interview.

"The security council has been discussing the possibility of an additional resolution which would ... want the judges ... to take also into account the factor of seniority."

Since the setting-up of the tribunal in 1993, the prosecutor has decided who to investigate and charge. The indictments are then sent to judges who decide if the case will stand up in court.

The Bush administration has been critical of the tribunal and Ms Del Ponte.

"The Americans will settle just for Karadzic and Mladic," said another tribunal source of the two Bosnian Serb leaders still at large. "Del Ponte has got too much independence. You'll never see such extensive powers vested in one person in international justice again."

2 posted on 02/11/2004 3:46:23 PM PST by konijn
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To: HAL9000
Who has use for this old bag Carla anymore? Who benefits from the tens of millions spent each year on the ICTY?
3 posted on 02/11/2004 3:51:30 PM PST by Seselj
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To: HAL9000
>>>>>She added that around 15 war crimes suspects remained on the run in Serbia - and she did not know how to get them arrested and transferred to The Hague.<<<

Darn, now we know where OBL is hiding. /sarcasm off

4 posted on 02/11/2004 8:39:00 PM PST by DTA (you ain't seen nothing yet)
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To: HAL9000
>>>>>She added that around 15 war crimes suspects remained on the run in Serbia - and she did not know how to get them arrested and transferred to The Hague.<<<

Darn, now we know where OBL is hiding. /sarcasm off

5 posted on 02/11/2004 8:39:55 PM PST by DTA (you ain't seen nothing yet)
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