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EXCEPTIONALLY UNCOMMON BUT NOT COMPLETELY IMPOSSIBLE ("suicide" evidence Serb witness)
Sense news agency ^ | September 12, 2006

Posted on 09/13/2006 9:15:36 AM PDT by joan

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To: LoneRangerMassachusetts

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1700218/posts

Communists and Islamophiles?


21 posted on 09/13/2006 10:24:32 AM PDT by Bokababe ( http://www.savekosovo.org)
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To: joan

I'm getting more interested.

Associated Press Worldstream
March 11, 2006 Saturday 8:07 PM GMT
HEADLINE: 11 war crimes suspects indicted by U.N. tribunal have died
BYLINE: By The Associated Press
DATELINE: BELGRADE Serbia-Montenegro

Eleven war crimes suspects indicted by the U.N. tribunal for the former Yugoslavia have died:

March 11, 2006: Slobodan Milosevic was found dead in his bed at the U.N. prison near The Hague.

March 2006: Milan Babic, 50, a Croatian Serb convicted of war crimes during a Serb rebellion against Croatia's independence, was found dead in his prison cell after an apparent suicide.

May 2003: Momir Talic, a Bosnian Serb general charged with genocide, died at the age of 61, following his release from the U.N. detention facility after doctors diagnosed him with cancer.

March 2003: Mehmed Alagic, a Bosnian Muslim general indicted for war crimes against Serbs and Croats during Bosnia's 1992-1995 war, died of a heart attack at home during a temporary release from the U.N. custody.

August 1998: Milan Kovacevic, a Bosnian Serb charged with crimes against humanity, died in the U.N. court's detention facility at the age of 57. His family claimed he was denied medical assistance and died painfully from a ruptured aorta.

June 1998: Slavko Dokmanovic, a Croatian Serb indicted for war crimes during the Croatian war, hanged himself in his cell at the U.N. detention facility.


22 posted on 09/13/2006 10:29:06 AM PDT by StructuredChaos
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To: StructuredChaos
"March 2003: Mehmed Alagic, a Bosnian Muslim general indicted for war crimes against Serbs and Croats during Bosnia's 1992-1995 war, died of a heart attack at home during a temporary release from the U.N. custody."

The Bosnian Muslim died in Bosnia, at home. I wouldn't be surprised if it was a false report that he conveniently had a heart attack when it was time to go back to the Hague.

The Serbs died in detention, or the one who was at death's door and terminal ill was released shortly before he died.

The Muslim was 55 and in good health when he was released, and then later allegedly died in Bosnia.

23 posted on 09/13/2006 10:38:01 AM PDT by joan
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To: joan

This is weird. Certainly such suicides and unfortunate mishaps resulting in the deaths of individuals all having something in common would have warranted an investigation by now.

What is going on here?


24 posted on 09/13/2006 10:45:28 AM PDT by StructuredChaos
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To: StructuredChaos

Man, do you need to ask?
Same as german Nazi "Peoples Court" or Stalins 30-es processess,,,

"No man, no problem", I. Stalin


25 posted on 09/13/2006 10:49:35 AM PDT by kronos77 (www.savekosovo.org say NO to Al-Qaeda new sanctuary (Go IDF!))
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To: kronos77

Taken from an article found at: http://www.balkanalysis.com/?p=649

"Now, the real question is how this will affect the Hague, the Kosovo negotiations and the future of international justice. The death of Milosevic ? who had recently demanded once again that former US President Clinton be forced to testify ? slams the book shut on the history of the Yugoslav wars of secession. If it is a truism that the victors write the history, it is irrefutable that even more fundamentally, it is the living who write the history"

And we are warned not to dig deeper.

"Milan Babic, one-time president of the short-lived Republic of Serbian Krajina in Croatia, was the first to go. He died in his cell at the Hague on March 5, allegedly having committed suicide. However, the fact that he had been described beforehand as being in good spirits and eager to provide further testimony against Serb war crimes suspects made the death somewhat suspicious. A source with close ties to the Hague told me that there was "much more" to the story than suicide, and that it would "dangerous for one's health to dig too deep into the affair."


26 posted on 09/13/2006 10:54:39 AM PDT by StructuredChaos
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To: joan
Joan, let's assume for a moment that Mr. Babic have had a $5M million policy on his life issued by the major U.S. insurance company. I am possitive that the insurance company would launch investigation after learning that the ligature markings were narrower than the belt supposedly used to make them and cite a possible foul play as a reason.

Such investigation would ask for the obvious - who could enter the prison cell and strangle him.

Because he was a bold liar, he was unpopular in prison among all prisoners, regardless of ethnicity. Imagine place where former war enemies, Serbs, Muslims and Croats live in harmony and boycotted this character. Could some of the inmates strangle him? Yes, but not likely, because they were observed 24/7 by CCTV.

Inmates did not have the capability to turn off the CCTV.

The more important answer is - cui bono?

In order to uncover this, the behavior of deceased is analysed and his unusual acts.

In this case, Mr. Babic was a key witness of The Hague persecution (not a typo). Before his sudden death, Mr. Babic voiced his intent to retract some statements he made previously. His sudden death prevented him of doing so.

So many uncanny things in The Hague dungeon rule out the possibility of accident. Once case is accident, two cases are coincidence, three cases are the pattern.

27 posted on 09/13/2006 11:04:48 AM PDT by DTA
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To: StructuredChaos
Who hung him and why?

All we really know at this point is the evidence shows he did not hang himself.

28 posted on 09/13/2006 2:05:46 PM PDT by FormerLib (Sacrificing our land and our blood cannot buy protection from jihad.-Bishop Artemije of Kosovo)
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