Milosevic: I'll name British leaders who helped me

By Julius Strauss and Philip Sherwell in Belgrade and Joe Murphy in London

SLOBODAN MILOSEVIC is planning to embarrass Britain and other Western
governments by revealing at his war crimes trial at The Hague the secret
deals which he claims propped up his regime during a decade of bloodshed in
the Balkans.

Milosevic: Lawyers will claim Western Governments propped up his regime

Lawyers for the deposed Serbian president will name three former Foreign
Secretaries, Lord Hurd, Lord Carrington and Lord Owen, in a strategy
designed to implicate British and American diplomatic figures in the bloody
break-up of Yugoslavia.
They will claim that he was given a "green light" for many of his most
controversial actions, including the use of force, by Western governments.
Branimir Gugl, one of Milosevic's lawyers, told The Telegraph yesterday: "Mr
Milosevic feels that Nato are the real criminals and that will be part of
his defence."
Milosevic will argue that the British peers, along with Foreign Office
diplomats, were involved in negotiating peace deals that were designed to
maintain him in power despite his record.
Lord Hurd's later role as a director of National Westminster Bank in
striking a lucrative deal with Milosevic to refinance the Serbian economy is
likely to be highlighted during the trial. Milosevic is expected in court on
Tuesday.
The former president, nicknamed the Butcher of Belgrade for his pitiless
treatment of ethnic minorities, is said to feel betrayed by Western
negotiators.
A Senior Foreign Office official said: "We will not be surprised if Lord
Hurd's dealings with Milosevic are raised during the trial but in fact our
hands are clean, we have nothing to hide. The French government may well be
nervous about its own friendly relationship with Milosevic right up to 1999
being brought up."
Lord Hurd, who aroused controversy by opposing American plans to lift the
arms embargo on Bosnia's Muslims, later became the deputy chairman of
NatWest Markets and brokered a deal to privatise Serbia's telecoms service.
At a secret business breakfast with Milosevic, he was accompanied by Dame
Pauline Neville-Jones, formerly Britain's most senior woman diplomat, who
had also joined the bank.
The French are believed to have maintained communications with the Serbs
during the Nato bombing campaign which was beset by leaks of targets. Serbs
claimed that Gen Bernard Janvier, a French former UN commander, secretly
promised to veto air strikes in 1995 provided that they released 300 UN
hostages. A month later, the Bosnian Serb army attacked Srebrenica, killing
7,000 Muslims in Europe's biggest war crime in 50 years.
Milosevic's lawyers plan to call former peace envoys to give evidence. These
include Lord Carrington, the chief negotiator for the European Union in
1991-92, Lord Owen, who co-brokered the 1993 Vance-Owen peace deal, and
Richard Holbrooke, the American who brokered the Dayton accord on Bosnia.
They, in turn, are likely to explain that whatever their misgivings about
Milosevic, his position as "strong man" in the region meant that they could
not ignore him.
Officials in The Hague, where Milosevic has been held since Thursday, say
they expect to broaden his charges to include genocide. Milosevic was under
close supervision last night; his parents committed suicide and there are
fears that he might try to do the same.


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/et?ac=002549632124328&pg=/et/01/7/1/wslob01.html



Miroslav Antic,
http://www.antic.org/

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