China Paper:Milosevic Trial Engineered

BEIJING (AP) - China's military on Sunday accused the United States and
Britain of engineering former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic
(news - web sites)'s war crimes trial to clear the way for NATO (news -
web sites)'s eastward expansion.

Although China is obligated to respect the U.N. tribunal, Britain and
the United States have used the court to further their political aims,
the People's Liberation Army Daily said in an editorial.

``Right now, the United States, Britain and other Western countries
claim they are trying Milosevic to 'uphold international justice.' In
fact, this arises from their need to gain world opinion and the
diplomatic upper hand,'' the editorial said.

China's communist leaders condemned the air war carried out by NATO
against Yugoslavia in 1999 to force an end to crackdowns on Muslims in
Kosovo. Beijing feared that the action might set a precedent for
international intervention in China's restive Tibet and Xinjiang
regions.

Their opposition hardened when NATO planes bombed the Chinese embassy in
Belgrade, sparking mob attacks on U.S. diplomatic missions in China.
China never accepted NATO's explanation that the attack was a mistake
caused by faulty targeting.

Beijing was silent when Milosevic was driven from power last October and
was quiet again on June 28 when he was sent to the Hague to be tried in
connection with alleged war crimes in Kosovo. However, the commentary by
the hard-line military newspaper appeared to reaffirm China's distrust
over the West's handling of Milosevic.

``The United States and other Western countries flaunt a double
political and legal standard. Pushing into court leaders of countries
they consider obstacles sets a nefarious precedent for international law
and must meet with the condemnation of international society,'' the
paper said.

It accused the United States and NATO countries of setting up the
tribunal in The Hague (news - web sites), Netherlands, for their own
political interests, then attacking Yugoslavia using the excuse of human
rights intervention because Milosevic was blocking NATO expansion.

The ``heroic opposition'' of the Yugoslav people and military produced a
mixed result, and NATO was forced to press for Milosevic's arrest to
remove a shadow lurking over the alliance's growth, the PLA daily said.

``Arresting and trying Milosevic sends a warning to other leaders of
countries that defy them: resistance is futile,'' the paper said. 


Email this story - View most 

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

                                   Serbian News Network - SNN

                                        [EMAIL PROTECTED]

                                    http://www.antic.org/

Reply via email to