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Europe
UN: Tribunal upholds Bosnian Muslim ex-army commander's acquittal
2007-10-17
The Hague (AKI) - The United Nations war crimes tribunal for the former Yugoslavia today upheld the acquittal of a former deputy army commander for the Bosnian Muslim forces during the Balkan wars on charges related to a massacre of 13 Bosnian Croat civilians in 1993.

The appeals chamber of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), sitting in The Hague, found that the trial chamber was correct in November 2005 to acquit Sefer Halilovic.

Halilovic, 55, had pleaded not guilty to the charge of command responsibility in the murders committed by Bosnian Muslim troops in the village of Grabovica, about 30 kilometres north of Mostar, in Bosnia and Herzegovina in September 1993.

He served as chief of the main staff of the Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina at the time, and prosecutors alleged that he was the commander of a military operation known as Neretva-93 that led to the killings in Grabovica by troops billeted in the village.

But the appeals chamber said prosecutors had failed to show that it was not reasonable of the trial chamber to find that Halilovic did not have the required degree of “effective control” over the troops to establish his superior responsibility under the law.

Meanwhile, the ICTY's chief prosecutor Carla Del Ponte addressed EU foreign ministers on Monday, saying that although Serbia has provided some of the requested documents and archives, its overall cooperation does not match its stated commitments to the tribunal.

Full access to some crucial archives has been denied so far, while a number of important documents have not yet been provided, she said.

She also criticised SerbiaÂ’s efforts to secure the arrest and extradition of the four remaining fugitives from the ICTY: Ratko Mladic; Radovan Karadzic; Goran Hadzic; and Stojan Zupljanin.

“I confirm that the situation today is better than it was a year ago,” Del Ponte said. “However, cooperation is still too slow and not yet sufficient. The fact that Ratko Mladic is still at large after all the promises and declarations that have been made over the years clearly demonstrates that fact.”

Karadzic, 62, the former Bosnian Serb president, and Mladic, 65, the former military chief, each face numerous charges, including genocide, extermination, murder, persecutions, deportation, taking of hostages and inflicting terror on civilians.

Hadzic, 49, is charged with murder, persecutions, torture, cruel treatment and other war crimes and crimes against humanity related to his role as president of a self-proclaimed breakaway state of rebel Serbs in southern Croatia during the early 1990s.

Zupljanin, 56, has been indicted on many counts, including murder, torture, forcible transfers and the wanton destruction of towns and villages. He served in the senior leadership in the Autonomous Region of Krajina, part of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an area that became notorious for its treatment of non-Serbs.
Posted by:anonymous5089

#2  The point of this article is the UN reminding Muslims that it is not only perfectly acceptable, but expected that they kill Christians.
Posted by: RWV   2007-10-17 20:38  

#1  From the Bush White House to the EU to the UN to the Russian President, when Muslims hold up a hoop depraved world leaders jump through it. When will the public become sick of this cockroach feeding?
Posted by: Woodrow Flique2473   2007-10-17 15:44  

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