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Prosecutors battle with Milosevic
BBC ^ | Friday, 28 June, 2002, 10:44 GMT | Clare Murphy

Posted on 06/28/2002 4:50:51 AM PDT by konijn

Friday, 28 June, 2002, 10:44 GMT 11:44 UK Prosecutors battle with Milosevic

By Clare Murphy BBC News Online

It is a year since Belgrade washed its hands of former Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic and delivered him to international prosecutors in The Hague.

But as the trial rolls on, it has become clear that not everything is going according to plan at the largest hearing of its kind since the Nazi Nuremberg trials.

A deadline is looming, key witnesses may never appear, and a recurring bout of apparent influenza is keeping Mr Milosevic tucked up in a detention centre rather than answering questions in court.

"There is definitely seems to be a sense of nervousness in The Hague," says Balkans analyst Gary Dempsey of the Washington-based Cato Institute.

"Milosevic is shrewd - he knows he can't ultimately win, but he can put up a strong fight in the meantime."

New stage

The court has given prosecutors until 26 July to present its evidence on Kosovo, where Mr Milosevic is accused of five counts of war crimes.

Judge May has frequently told Milosevic to stop making speeches

Most of the 80 or so proscecution witnesses so far have been villagers, called to establish the facts about events in which people were killed or driven from their homes.

More recently, however, prosecutors have started calling experts and political insiders, with the goal of proving that Mr Milosevic was fully in control of what Serb forces were doing in Kosovo.

But as they move to this second stage of the prosecution, and time races on, they have also been steadily shortening the witness list.

The fact that Mr Milosevic chose to represent himself, rather than appointing a team of lawyers, increased the pressure on the prosecution, by ruling out the behind-the-scenes discussions that help cases run smoothly.

"You can agree on some elements which are accepted by both sides and you don't have to prove them in court," says prosecution spokeswoman Florence Hartmann.

Political theatre

The absence of such agreements has forced prosecutors to spend a significant amount of time using witnesses simply to establish basic facts, rather than seeking to apportion blame.

Prosecutors have also entered a lot of testimony in the form of summary statements, which means that they do not have the right to question the witnesses, whereas Mr Milosevic does.

Mr Milosevic is as conscious as anyone of the deadline looming over the prosecutors.

"Milosevic is really playing a game here," Avril McDonald of the Humanitarian Law Yearbook told BBC radio.

"In the last weeks it's quite clear that the prosecution is using very little court time, Milosevic is wasting as much as possible.

"In a football game, normally, if someone is wasting time, the referree blows the whistle and that person is penalised. Well, this is certainly not happening in this court."

Judge Richard May has warned Mr Milosevic that his cross examination could be stopped if he continues to make speeches instead of asking questions, but in most cases these warnings have made little difference.

"He has successfully used the court as a political stage," said Mr Dempsey. "He has played to his audience and even won the sympathies of those back home who hated him when he was president."

Private testimony

Among recent high-profile witnesses, William Walker - a US diplomat who led an international observer mission in Kosovo - and Klaus Naumann - the Nato general who led the bombing campaign against Yugoslavia - have helped to link Mr Milosevic with crimes in Kosovo.

Both of them insisted that Mr Milosevic knew very well what was going on.

But other key witness such as the US special envoy to the Balkans, Richard Holbrooke, who met Mr Milosevic on several occasions as the Kosovo crisis was unfolding, may never testify in public.

Newspaper reports say that Washington is insisting that he testify in private, a prospect that prosecutors are unhappy with as they want the trial to be a transparent affair - otherwise it may not seem credible.

Medical examination

Another concern are the delays by Mr Milosevic's absence through illness.

Since the trial opened in February, Mr Milosevic has been ill, in total, for about a month. He fell ill again two weeks ago after an initial bout of flu in March.

The tribunal has ordered a full medical examination of the 60-year-old, apparently not satisfied with the report provided so far.

The Kosovo indictment is supposed to be the easiest part of the trial.

Mr Milosevic is also facing charges relating to alleged crimes against humanity in Croatia, as well as genocide in Bosnia.

But while Mr Milosevic was President of Yugoslavia during the Kosovo events, his official role was as President of Serbia during the conflicts in Bosnia and Croatia.

It will therefore be far harder to link him directly with the atrocities carried out by Bosnian Serb paramilitaries, than with the actions of Yugoslav police and soldiers in Kosovo.

"Prosecutors have set themselves a real challenge," said one legal expert.

"And at the moment at any rate, it looks as though they have taken on more than they bargained for."


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: balkans; campaignfinance
Poor prosecution, theyt shouldn't wine because they don't have a case!!
1 posted on 06/28/2002 4:50:51 AM PDT by konijn
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To: konijn
It's a shame the prosecution is having to work so hard. With a sympathetic judge rationing the time Milo can cross examine, one has to wonder what evidence other than hearsay, the prosecution has. In normal proceedings, there would have to be written orders documented by tape or letter issued to the underlings.

Don't they have these? Was Milosevic ever present to be seen by witnesses to any of the supposed crimes? The kangaroos are loose in the Hague.

Is this the reason that the US is rather skittish on the issue of the ICC court? If so, why are they supporting this judicial joke?

2 posted on 06/28/2002 6:02:41 AM PDT by meenie
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To: Balkans
bump
3 posted on 06/28/2002 6:14:36 AM PDT by DTA
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To: konijn
Belgrade washed its hands of former Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic and delivered him to international prosecutors

As I recall, the Hague purchased Milosevic in the form of billions of dollars of aide, which Yugoslavia desperately needed, because nato had destroyed their infrastructure.

As for the rest of the article - It seems very unfair of Slobo to defend himself. Doesn't he know that he should let the (kangeroo) court quietly railroad him?

4 posted on 06/28/2002 8:14:58 AM PDT by stop_fascism
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To: *balkans
bump
5 posted on 06/28/2002 10:07:13 AM PDT by konijn
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To: konijn
Best appraisal so far IMO but smells a little of sour grapes.

The 'strategy' now is to 'extol' the 'testimony of Paddy, Walker and Naumann as bordering on conclusive when in fact to anyone watching, their 'testimony' was contrived at Milosevics expense.

6 posted on 06/28/2002 5:05:04 PM PDT by duckln
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To: konijn
In the last weeks it's quite clear that the prosecution is using very little court time, Milosevic is wasting as much as possible.

Yeah, exposing the false witness is a waste of time.

7 posted on 07/01/2002 4:57:48 AM PDT by A. Pole
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To: konijn
When the Prosecution comes to 'proving' that genocide occured in Bosnia, I wonder if they will call on Fikret Abdic and his 60,000 moslem supporters to support their stance!? More likely, the Sarajevo government won't let him out of jail or he will have an 'accident'.

VRN

8 posted on 07/01/2002 5:42:49 AM PDT by Voronin
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