Hey what about Clinton and his war against humanity and  his war against
Waco  = it would  seem that the sale of HIV/AIDS blood which ended up
around the world at the time of the advent of AIDS speaks for itself.

GAY PRIDE now marches the streets having assumed the pose of a Gay Moses
march to their promised land and they meet in communist heaquarters
around the world, and Paula Poundstone - what is this lesbian or
whatever she is, is she not a symbol of the UN attempt to slaughter the
innocents by corrupting their bodies with AIDS - it is not a war against
AIDS it is a war against children....UN sponsored.

Note the Serbs pretty upset about queers running the streets but take a
good look at the USA and see your future - UN started the War against
the Children.   Rosie O'Donnell and Paula Poundstone on PBS?

Paul wasn't laughing yesterday for her crimes against the children - War
Crimes against the chilren.

Saba





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July 4, 2001
THE OVERVIEW
At Arraignment, Milosevic Mocks His U.N. Accusers
By ROGER COHEN with MARLISE SIMONS

 Reuters Slobodan Milosevic at the war crimes tribunal on Tuesday in The
Hague, flanked by United Nations guards.
  Milosevic Rejects Court
Albanians Say Trying Top Leaders Isn't Enough (July 4, 2001)
The Briton in Charge: Sober, Polite, and Tough (July 4, 2001)
Text: Milosevic Brings Air of Scorn to Tribunal (July 4, 2001)
Case Against Milosevic Is Not Simple to Prove (July 2, 2001)
Milosevic Is Given to U.N. for Trial in War-Crime Case (June 29, 2001)
Join a Discussion on Instability in the Balkans
HE HAGUE, July 3 — Slobodan Milosevic appeared today before an
international tribunal that has accused him of crimes against humanity,
and he dismissed the court with disdain as an "illegal organ."
Jutting chin raised contemptuously, Mr. Milosevic sat flanked by two
guards before seven empty chairs intended for his lawyers. The former
Serbian leader, who plunged the Balkans into four brutal ethnic wars,
chose to appear without counsel and to deliver his own rebuttal, in
English: "I consider this tribunal false tribunal and indictments false
indictments." [Text, Page A7.]
Mr. Milosevic's isolation today, 12 years after the wave of Serbian
nationalist sentiment that he had ignited swept him to power, gave added
drama to the courtroom confrontation as he sat facing a black-robed
prosecution team led by Carla Del Ponte. The battle between the West and
its longtime Balkan nemesis was stripped to its essentials.
On one side was Mrs. Del Ponte, a Swiss lawyer who has accused Mr.
Milosevic of three counts of crimes against humanity, including murder;
on the other, the bristling Serbian nationalist mocking "this so- called
tribunal." Between them sat a British judge, Richard May, seeking to
remind the accused of procedure.
For a long time, Mr. Milosevic bent Serbia to his whim. Today, largely
rejected by a country he impoverished and led into wars that left
200,000 people dead, he stood as the first head of state indicted before
an international court for crimes committed while he was in office.
Outright contempt greeted all the requests from Judge May for answers to
his questions. Asked if he wanted to exercise his right to have the
54-page indictment read to him, Mr. Milosevic shot back, "That's your
problem." The indictment was not read.
When asked if he would enter a plea of guilty or not guilty to the
charges of crimes against humanity in Kosovo in 1999, Mr. Milosevic
switched to Serbian from his heavily accented English and replied, "This
trial's aim is to produce false justification for the war crimes of
NATO," a reference to the bombing of Kosovo and Serbia in 1999.
After repeating the question, Judge May declared, "We treat your
response as a failure to enter a plea and we shall enter a plea of not
guilty on each count on your behalf."
In this way, the 12-minute proceedings, held in a small gray-carpeted
room behind bulletproof glass, moved toward their conclusion. Three
times, Judge May cut off Mr. Milosevic, the former president of both
Yugoslavia and Serbia, its largest republic, in midsentence, once
commenting, "Mr. Milosevic, this is not the time for speeches."
Today's action, while intense, seemed to frustrate the dark-suited Mr.
Milosevic by its brevity. Looking at his watch as he was escorted out,
he said to a guard: "Hmm, 10 minutes."
The brief arraignment set the scene for what is certain to be an intense
battle between opposing views of the world: nations and groups that are
determined — after what Isaiah Berlin called "the most terrible
century" — to combat crimes it regards as intolerable through the
extension of international law, versus a man who sees this campaign as
little more than a cloak for American imperialism.
The confrontation will also bring Mr. Milosevic face to face with acts
he has repeatedly disavowed. The indictment includes charges that
Yugoslav or Serbian units ultimately under Mr. Milosevic's control drove
740,000 Kosovo Albanians from their homes in 1999 and killed several
hundred in cold blood. He also faces one charge of breaching the Geneva
Conventions on the conduct of war.
In addition, Mrs. Del Ponte, 54, said in an interview published today in
the French daily Le Monde that she envisages bringing charges of
genocide against Mr. Milosevic for Serbian crimes in the Bosnian and
Croatian wars. The current indictment refers only to Kosovo; it contains
no genocide charge.
Outside the court today, one young woman waved a Bosnian flag. She said
that she was from Zenica, in central Bosnia, and that her family had
been killed by Serbian forces, one small reminder of the ways in which
Mr. Milosevic's trial may bring some comfort to thousands of anonymous
bereaved.
Given the time it will take to prepare any further indictment, and the
time Mr. Milosevic — with or without lawyers — will need to prepare
himself to face the charges, it is almost certain that the trial itself
will not begin until next year. Once under way, it is expected to last
at least a year.
Mr. Milosevic's approach in court was consistent with that of a man who
has always refused to admit the existence of things he does not like.
Throughout the wars of Yugoslavia's destruction, he waved away the
desolate villages and desperate camps where the dead mounted up, far
from his remote Belgrade offices.
The Serbian concentration camps for Muslims in Bosnia in 1992 were
dismissed as inventions. Serbian massacres — from Vukovar in Croatia
in 1991, to Srebrenica in Bosnia in 1995, to Racak in Kosovo in 1999 —
were always the fabrications of Western or NATO propaganda.
Today, in effect, Mr. Milosevic declared that he did not acknowledge the
existence of the court in which he stood.
This attitude prompted a sharp reminder from Judge May, 62, who started
to work at the United Nations Tribunal here in 1997 and has a reputation
for keeping tight control of his courtroom. "Mr. Milosevic," he said,
"you are now before this tribunal and you're within the jurisdiction of
it. You will be tried by this tribunal."
That much, at least, does seem clear. With or without lawyers, Mr.
Milosevic will face the prosecution's case in the court where he sat
today.
Graham Blewitt, the deputy chief prosecutor, said the court would like
to see Mr. Milosevic defended by the "best available legal defense there
is in the world."
But, he added: "If the accused decides to stand mute and not say
anything throughout the course of the trial, then it makes no
difference. Because throughout the trial the prosecution bears the onus
of establishing guilt beyond reasonable doubt. At no time does the onus
shift to the accused to prove that he is innocent."
Continued
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