From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: "STOP NATO: ¡NO PASARAN!" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Wed, 14 Feb 2001 00:05:50 -0800 (PST)


http://www.russiatoday.com/news.php3?id=289334&section=default


Moscow Wants War Crimes Court in the Hague Shut

UNITED NATIONS, Feb 14, 2001 -- (Reuters) Russia's
envoy to the United Nations on Tuesday said it was
time the Security Council considered shutting down the
UN war crimes tribunal on the former Yugoslavia,
calling it an anti-Serb court.

Ambassador Sergei Lavrov told the council during its
monthly debate on Kosovo that a resolution it approved
last November asked the Secretary-General Kofi Annan
to propose "as soon as possible" a date the court
could be shut down.

"We believe that the council could already be informed
about proposed time-frames for compliance with the
above instructions of the Security Council," Lavrov
said.

He reminded the council that Moscow had regularly
spoken out against bias in the special UN court set up
to examine crimes against humanity during the wars
that tore the old Yugoslavia apart in the 1990s.

"However, there is still prejudice -- including the
anti-Serb bias -- in the tribunal's work, and you can
see this first and foremost in the activities of
tribunal prosecutor Carla del Ponte," he said.

Western governments see cooperation with the tribunal
as a key test of the willingness of the new reform
government in Belgrade to deal with Yugoslavia's
turbulent past and fully embrace democracy.

Del Ponte, a Swiss, has pushed hard to bring to trial
former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic, who was
ousted in a popular uprising on October. 5. His
indictment, however, was filed by her predecessor,
Canadian Louise Arbour.

But new Yugoslav President Vojislav Kostunica has made
clear he believes Milosevic should instead be tried in
his homeland, and possibly on corruption charges
rather than for alleged war crimes.

Milosevic had been accused of atrocities committed by
Serb forces in Kosovo province during NATO's 1999
bombing campaign.

The tribunal was created in 1993 with a four-year life
and extended another four years in 1997.

Since its inception it has indicted 98 people, and 39
of these of these are currently either on trial,
appealing an initial judgment or awaiting trial. But
proceedings are being handled by just 14 judges while
the accused can spend years in detention awaiting
trial.


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