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Serbia to choose Mladic or EU, Rehn and del Ponte say
20.01.2006 - 10:44 CET | By Teresa Küchler

EU enlargement commissioner Olli Rehn together with UN chief
prosecutor Carla del Ponte said the EU could suspend accession talks
with Serbia and Montenegro if Belgrade does not hand over war crime
suspect Ratko Mladic to the UN tribunal in The Hague.

At a joint press conference in Brussels on Thursday (19 January), Ms
del Ponte repeated her belief that the former Bosnian Serb military
commander, one of the two top war crimes suspects in the Balkans, is
in Serbia and is being protected by the army, European media say.

She urged the EU to suspend EU-Serbia and Montenegro talks on a
Stabilisation and Association Agreement (SAA) - the first legal step
to EU membership - unless Mr Mladic was brought before the UN court
(ICTY) by July.

"What I need, and what is an international obligation from Belgrade,
is to arrest him and deliver him to The Hague," she said, adding that
the EU was an important means of bringing pressure to bear against
Belgrade.

"I need full co-operation from Serbia and I need help from the EU to
obtain that full co-operation," Ms del Ponte declared.

Enlargement commissioner Olli Rehn said after the meeting "I would see
it as extremely difficult to conclude negotiations on the SAA with
Serbia without the full cooperation [of Serbia] with the ICTY."

"I need to consult member states, but suspension of the negotiations
is one alternative," Mr Rehn said. "Serbia has to choose now between
its nationalist past and a European future. I hope it will choose a
European future."

Where is he?
Meanwhile, contradicting reports on Mr Mladic's hiding place have been
circulating in the press during the past few days.

Bosnian Serb police announced earlier this week that they had launched
a dawn raid on a potential location in an eastern Bosnian region.

A Belgrade newspaper on Wednesday claimed that Mr Mladic is hiding in
Russia, but Ms del Ponte quashed the report on Thursday.

"I have no need to get in touch with the Russian authorities about
Mladic, because Mladic is in Serbia, and, as you know, Mladic is
protected by the power of the army," she stated.

Meanwhile, another Serb suspect - 51 year-old Dragan Vasiljkovic - has
been arrested in Sydney, Australia, early reports on Friday morning
indicate.

Mr Vasiljkovic was allegedly part of a Serb paramilitary unit that
ordered the torture and murder of soldiers and civilians during the
Serbo-Croat war in the early 1990s.

Serb minister speaks out
Serbian foreign minister Vuk Draskovic toed the EU line on war crimes
in an interview published in El Pais on Friday.

"Capturing war crime suspects Ratko Mladic and Radovan Karadzic is the
best news Serbia could possibly imagine for a European future," he
said.

But the minister also revealed just how strongly Belgrade feels about
the prospect of full Kosovan independence - one of the options on the
table in current UN and EU-sponsored talks on the province's future
status.

He said a free Kosovo could be a "dangerous tumour for Europe," asking
if the international community would be prepared to recognise the
sovereignty of Turkish-controlled Cyprus and Chechnya or separatist
regions of Spain and Italy as well.
######

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-smajlovic21jan21,0,3073642.story?coll=la-news-comment-opinions
The Los Angeles Times


latimes.com : Opinion : Commentary
The bad guys who got away
By Ljiljana Smajlovic
LJILJANA SMAJLOVIC is the editor of the Politika daily newspaper in Belgrade.

January 21, 2006

THE WEST BLAMES the East, the East blames circumstances. Meanwhile,
Europe's two most-wanted men — indicted Bosnian Serb war criminals
Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic — have for the last 10 years freely
roamed impoverished Bosnia-Herzegovina and Serbia-Montenegro with U.S.
bounties of $5 million on their heads. In the minds of some of their
die-hard supporters, these outlaws of the 1992-1995 Bosnian war have
become romantic, almost glamorous, villains — the Butch Cassidy and
Sundance Kid, if you will, of the Balkans.

Why haven't they been arrested? After a decade of lame excuses, NATO
recently came up with a truly novel explanation. Maj. Gen. David
Leakey announced that the fugitives were "very unlikely to be arrested
soon" because coordinated international action had made it "virtually
impossible for them to move around freely." In other words, the NATO
posse had been so effective at scaring them and encircling them as to
preclude the possibility of nabbing them. Clever, huh?

It's generally assumed that Mladic, indicted in the 1995 slaughter of
thousands of Muslim men and boys in Srebrenica and other war crimes,
is holed up somewhere in Serbia, where he could, presumably, be caught
if authorities had the will and the skill.

Western intelligence agencies have regularly placed Karadzic, the
former Bosnian Serb president held responsible for the ethnic
cleansing of Bosnia, beyond Belgrade's reach, possibly somewhere in
the borderlands between Bosnia and Montenegro, a region of rugged
mountains and secluded valleys where anti-Communist World War II
fugitives holed up for as much as a decade after Europe was liberated.
But this area too is well within the reach, if not the grasp, of
NATO's well-equipped, trained and mobile forces stationed in Bosnia.

Still, it doesn't appear they're going to be found very soon. After
years of sitting on its hands, NATO, whose forces in Bosnia are now
down to 7,000, has conveniently decided that it is not responsible for
capturing the two men — that it will take a Serb to catch a Serb.



AND IS that likely? As a result of wounded national pride, one can
still find T-shirts, calendars, posters, lapel pins and wooden icons
emblazoned with the faces of Karadzic and Mladic. Adept apologists
themselves, the Serbs have matched NATO's failure to arrest the famous
outlaws, pathetic excuse for pathetic excuse. No one believes them, of
course, but still nothing gets done.

It didn't have to be this way. Ten years ago, when the International
Criminal Tribunal in The Hague indicted Karadzic and Mladic on charges
of genocide and crimes against humanity, NATO had 60,000 troops in
Bosnia, which is smaller than West Virginia. For two years after the
indictments, Mladic and Karadzic moved freely across Bosnia in full
view of NATO forces, according to Carla Del Ponte, The Hague war
crimes prosecutor.

"Karadzic was giving interviews and running party and state business
with the full knowledge of the international community, while Mladic
even participated in military ceremonies," Del Ponte told the U.N.
Security Council last month. In failing to arrest them, NATO put the
safety of its troops above its obligation to arrest war criminals.

And now Serbia — a small nation broken by civil wars and international
sanctions, demoralized by the U.S.-led NATO bombing of 1999, rich only
in lost causes — stands to lose millions of dollars in U.S. aid if it
does not deliver the two men to the tribunal in The Hague. But by
opting to strong-arm a small nation, the West has engendered
grass-roots hostility. The victims of sanctions will be the majority
of Serbian citizens who are trying to rebuild their country, not the
small number of die-hards who are protecting the outlaws. Serbia has
already handed over two former presidents (notably Slobodan
Milosevic), three generals, two chiefs of staff, one secretary of
defense and scores of lesser-known indicted war criminals, in addition
to two top spymasters. It has a democratic government led by men and
women who defeated Milosevic twice in 2000, first at the polls and
then in the streets when he tried to steal the election.

But the government hasn't done everything it could. Mladic's son was
even permitted to collect his father's army pension up until last
month. The Serbian government has yet to freeze the fugitive's assets.

It is sad that this region still fosters a culture of impunity, that
it continues to ignore the air of coldblooded indifference shown by
those who have been caught in the act.

                                   Serbian News Network - SNN

                                        news@antic.org

                                    http://www.antic.org/

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