Kathimerini (Greece), Oct. 15, 2002

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http://www.eKathimerini.com/4dcgi/_w_articles_ell_8150436_15/10/2002_220
29

                           Milosevic denies all guilt in Kosovo trial

Unfazed by harrowing testimony, former Yugoslav president blames NATO
bombing
 and KLA for refugees; accuses West of conspiracy


                                               By Diana Seale -
Kathimerini English Edition

                                               As the second part of the
trial of Slobodan Milosevic
                                               that began on September
26 enters its third week,
                  there are still lingering doubts that the prosecution,
in the trial's first part that ended on September 11,
                  had proved the charges of crimes against humanity and
violations of the laws and customs of war that
                  were allegedly committed by Serb forces during the
1999 Kosovo war.

                  The former Yugoslav president was charged with a total
of 66 counts over the wars that took place in
                  Croatia, Bosnia and Kosovo. Five of these counts -
deportation, two counts of murder, forcible transfer
                  and persecution on political, religious and racial
grounds, that referred to events in Kosovo between
                  January 1 and June 20, 1999 - were dealt with in the
first part of the trial.

                  Together with four others, Milosevic is accused of
individually planning, aiding, instigating, ordering,
                  committing or otherwise aiding and abetting a
deliberate and widespread or systematic campaign of
                  terror and violence directed at Kosovo Albanian
civilians.

                  Ninety-six days - and over 10,000 transcript pages -
later, the prosecution had accumulated a mosaic of
                  testimony and statements, some of it harrowing, but
had not necessarily produced the <smoking gun>
                  that tied Milosevic to the crimes.

                  What the prosecution had to prove was that Milosevic
intended to commit the crimes, or alternatively,
                  that the crimes were <natural and foreseeable>
consequences of the accused's acts.

                  Secondly, they had to establish the suspect's de jure
and de facto control over the army and police.

                  Thirdly, they had to establish that the indictees
<knew or had reason to know> that their subordinates
                  had committed or were likely to commit such crimes, or
had failed to take <necessary and reasonable
                  measures to prevent such acts or punish the
perpetrators.>

                  All Milosevic had to do was to raise reasonable doubt.

                  In the opening summary for the prosecution that
started on February 12 and lasted two days, Senior
                  Trial Attorney Geoffrey Nice gave a potted history of
events leading up to and beyond the breakup of
                  Yugoslavia.

                  The prosecution's difficulties were highlighted when
he said Milosevic was <a man who would leave no
                  traces if he could avoid them or who indeed destroyed
traces of his control.>

                  Trial Attorney Dirk Ryneveld, responsible for the
Kosovo part of the indictment, pointed out that
                  Milosevic, as commander in chief, had de jure control
of the Yugoslav army (VJ) and after the
                  declaration of war by Serbia on March 24, control of
the Ministry of Interior police (MUP), which was
                  subordinated to the VJ in time of war.

                  He made it clear that the prosecution regarded the
Kosovo events as <primarily a deportation case,>
                  with killing serving the objective of driving out the
population, of whom an estimated 840,000 fled.

                  The indictment lists 13 deportation sites and 12
killing sites, and some 900 murders.

                  The prosecution's initial summary was succeeded by an
even longer response (two and a half days)
                  from Milosevic. He attacked what he called a Western
conspiracy, an <ocean of lies and the product of
                  propaganda> and produced videos and photographs of his
own, a gruesome gallery of <carbonized
                  bodies,> complete with names and places, allegedly
victims of the NATO bombing.

                  The main thrust of his defense was that he was
combating terrorism. Albanian civilians had either fled
                  the NATO bombing, or were forced or persuaded to flee
by the ethnic Albanian rebel Kosovo
                  Liberation Army (KLA). Moreover, the Serb police and
army comported themselves with <honor and
                  chivalry,> and had strict orders not to fire on
civilians, he averred.

                  Witnesses

                  Milosevic was an effective and ruthless
cross-examiner.

                  First witness Mahmut Bakalli proved no match for a
lengthy cross-examination that displayed Milosevic's
                  grasp of events, though he scored points toward the
end.

                  But little the former communist said was germane to
the events in question.

                  Bakalli alleged that in an October 1997 meeting in
Kosovo, the head of state security told him they
                  had a <scorched earth> policy to destroy 700 Albanian
populated settlements.

                  One of the few relevant points in the clash, it
remained on the level of assertion.

                  Milosevic followed a standard line when questioning
the Albanian witnesses, which was to ask them
                  whether they had heard of KLA attacks in the vicinity,
and to suggest they had fled NATO bombing.

                  Witnesses to the crimes proper began their testimony
on February 20 on the first incident related in the
                  indictment, in which the village of Celina was
surrounded by tanks and armored vehicles, shelled and
                  burnt. Civilians were forced to come out of a nearby
forest on March 28 and were marched to a nearby
                  village, where the men were separated from the women
and beaten, robbed, and had all their identity
                  documents taken from them, according to indictment.

                  In the nearby village of Nogavac, 8,000 civilians were
ordered to leave from a mountain where they
                  had sought shelter and <forcibly dispersed into nearby
villages.> On April 2, 1999, forces of the Federal
                  Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY) and Serbia started
shelling the villages, killing a number of people who
                  had been sleeping in tractors and cars. The survivors
headed for the border, where all their
                  identification papers were removed.

                  There was also considerable destruction of property.

                  First witness Agim Zeqiri, 50, stated that his village
of Celina was surrounded in the afternoon by the
                  army, which set fire to it. He went and hid by a
stream, from where the villagers moved, out of fear of
                  being shot from the roofs of houses, leaving the women
and children behind. His uncle and cousin later
                  went down to check on the women and children. They
never returned.

                  A day later, along with thousands of others, he found
himself in the village of Pisjak, which was
                  surrounded by the army and police. The men were
separated from the women and children and forced
                  to lie down. A friend was shot dead and he himself was
kicked in the head and beaten so badly he
                  developed permanent kidney problems. The men were
taken to the Albanian border, in trucks, and
                  expelled.

                  Sixteen of his family were killed, in circumstances
that were not clarified. The eldest was 62, the
                  youngest, just 18 months.

                  Milosevic never had a chance to finish his
cross-examination of the farmer, who pleaded illness and
                  was excused.

                  The next witness, Fehmi Elshani, described how he saw
military vehicles approaching the nearby
                  village of Nogavac, where he lived, and whisked his
family away to a safe place. <Meanwhile, they [the
                  vehicles] set off toward Celina and entered Celina,>
he testified. Celina then started burning, he said.
                  Later, the army came round to his village and set fire
to it as well. He and his two brothers hid in the
                  cellar, and when the Serb forces had left, put out the
fires before joining the some 20,000 people from
                  Nogavac and neighboring villages hiding out.

                  In the evening, they were surrounded by Serb troops,
<firing into the air with automatic rifles.>

                  He was told that a Serbian officer had said they were
to go to Albania.

                  But they were stopped by Serb forces who <made us all
go to Nagafc [Nogavac], and they put us, all of
                  us, in Nagafc and didn't allow us to go to any other
villages.>

                  On April 2, he was <awoken by two large detonations>
and <it was a powerful explosion, as if from an
                  airplane.> The yard itself was as if <ploughed up by
shells> and he saw seven dead bodies.

                  Elshani fled to Prizren, and then to Albania,
surrendering his identity card at the border, where <in front
                  my very eyes they threw them away in a place they had
collected all the personal identity cards of the
                  people who had left for Albania.>

                  Milosevic suggested there had been a battle between
KLA forces and the VJ at the time in question.
                  Elshani denied this.

                  To a suggestion that the village had been hit by
cluster bombs, Elshani claimed Cyrillic writing had
                  found on the fragments.

                  Milosevic used the same tactics on Besnik Sokoli, of
Pec, who testified that he and his family, fearful of
                  the Serb forces in the city, started walking to
Montenegro, were turned back to Pec and then driven to
                  Prizren on buses with hundreds of others and to a
village on the border with Albania.

                  To Milosevic's questions regarding KLA attacks in and
around Pec, he replied with a stolid <I don't know
                  about that.>

                  But the prosecution forestalled Milosevic, asking, <Mr
Sokoli, did you leave because of the NATO
                  bombing?>

                  <No, I did not leave because of NATO bombing, because
I didn't have any reason to be afraid of
                  them.>

                  Milosevic found other witnesses trickier to handle.

                  Halit Barani, regional chairman of the Council for the
Defense of Human Rights and Freedoms, gave
                  evidence on February 27.

                  It was a detailed account of murder and mayhem in
Kosovska Mitrovica, with times, dates and places,
                  even the names of the perpetrators at times.

                  Barani, who moved from house to house to avoid being
caught, kept a record of the incidents of violent
                  death, hiding out of sight behind an electricity pole
on one occasion. Up until June 17, 1999, he said,
                  650 Albanians <of both genders and all ages> had been
killed in the Mitrovica municipality, and 79
                  <are considered disappeared,> including his own
brother. Eighty thousand people were expelled.

                  In response to questions by the prosecution, Barani
frankly detailed the presence of the KLA in various
                  locations and his own contacts with them, forestalling
Milosevic.

                  Barani, the latter said, had treated <every conflict
between the army and police with the KLA as an
                  attack by the army on Albanian civilians.> A feisty
witness, Barani was unfazed by Milosevic's
                  questioning and freely contradicted him. <I can say
that of all of the bodies that I saw, not one of them
                  was in uniform,> Barani stated.

                  Milosevic then grilled Barani on killings by the KLA.
Barani denied knowledge, and was put, for the first
                  time, on the defensive. <He knows nothing about a
single crime committed over the Serbs or loyal
                  Albanians,> said Milosevic. <He claims that the Serb
army and police force went and ran after civilians,
                  with 4,000 KLA members present.> In a battle of wits,
the honors lay fairly even.

                  Reasonable doubt?

                  The prosecution rested its case on the Kosovo part of
the indictment on September 11. Milosevic's
                  tactics - demonstrating bias in witnesses, seizing on,
often minor, discrepancies in their testimony,
                  confusing witnesses and above all, his strident
insistence of a conspiracy against him - were effective in
                  playing to the public gallery, whether in Serbia or
the West. But in a court of law, they could merely
                  suggest his case is weak. While many witnesses came
across as biased, that did not necessarily reflect
                  on their evidence in chief.

                  After all, there were the bodies. DNA testing - by a
Belgrade institute - found 11 corpses exhumed this
                  June in Batajnica, Serbia, to be some of those killed
in Suva Reka on March 25, 1999, according to
                  John Zdrilic, tribunal investigator, on September 9.

                  Statistician Patrick Ball, testifying on March 13,
cast doubt on Milosevic's assertions that NATO
                  bombing was responsible for the refugees. Using
graphs, he pointed out that NATO air strikes followed
                  the <peak of killings> and the peak of refugee flows
in respectively 20 and 13 out of Kosovo's 29
                  municipalities. And military analyst Philip Coo,
testifying on September 10, pointed out that the VJ
                  and MUP had a clear structure of command. There was
little room for illegal armed organizations to
                  operate. But he admitted he had not seen <a single
document... signed... by the FRY president giving
                  orders directly to the MUP.>

*********
http://www.eKathimerini.com/4dcgi/_w_articles_ell_8150496_15/10/2002_220
28

                    Serb soldier testifies to unprovoked massacre of
women and children

                  Possibly clinching testimony came not from one of the
victims, but from one of the Serb soldiers who
                  testified on September 6 as a protected witness.

                  Witness K41, as he was called, was assigned to a
logistics support unit, Battalion Technical Company of
                  the 549th Motorized Brigade, commanded by Lieutenant
Dragisa Jacimovic. Operations were carried
                  out by a Sergeant Rajko Kozlina.

                  In February 1999, "we took up positions above the
village of Jeskovo, then the artillery started...
                  shooting at the village."

                  He did not notice any return fire coming from the
village.

                  Perhaps 30 people had been killed, he said. "I saw 10
dead persons but I did not see a single one in a
                  KLA uniform."

                  In perhaps the most horrifying testimony given at the
trial, witness K41 relates atrocities that took place
                  in the village of Trnje (not in the original
indictment) in March 1999. Eighty to 100 soldiers, including
                  his company, took up positions above the village.

                  Captain Pavle Gavrilovic, in his orders to the
sergeants, "motioned with his hand toward Trnje, and he
                  said that on that day no one should remain alive
there."

                  They then moved downhill to the outskirts of the
village. A man carrying a bag over his shoulder
                  appeared, and was cut down in a burst of gunfire,
fired by Sergeant Kozlina. After the village had been
                  raked by anti-aircraft fire, the soldiers moved in.
The villagers fled.

                  The soldiers fired on a haystack and then moved from
house to house, emptying them of their
                  inhabitants.

                  "I remember an elderly man forced out of his house,
and I remember the sergeant [Kozlina] ordering
                  the soldier [Private Milosevic] to shoot him. But the
soldier refused and said, 'I can't shoot. I can't shoot
                  at the man.'"

                  Sergeant Kozlina then shot the man, saying, "This is
how it's done," witness K41 said.

                  Some 15 people were brought out of the houses and
assembled in the yard, including women and
                  children. They were made to kneel down in the yard,
and the sergeant ordered the soldiers to leave,
                  except for four or five, including witness K41, who
were ordered to shoot at the group of people.

                  "There was a baby, and it had been shot with three
bullets, and it was screaming unbelievably loud,"
                  the soldier said.

                  A further group of 30 to 40 people had sought shelter
by the creek. By this time, some had had enough
                  of the rampage. After pleading by the lieutenant,
Jacimovic, the women and children were released.
                  Four or five men were killed.

                  A second village, Mamusa, was then torched.

                  The next day, the dead were collected and placed on a
truck. "The sergeant told us that the bodies of
                  the men who were killed in the creek should not be
touched... and only the women's bodies should be
                  collected," the witness said. A total of five or six
bodies were then buried in the mountains.

                  Milosevic was unable to shake witness K41's testimony.

                  "Who was in command?" Milosevic fired at him. How come
a lowly sergeant was in command of a
                  high-ranking officer like Jacimovic? "I explained that
to you very nicely," the witness fired back. The
                  sergeant was a "heroic figure," the lieutenant a
figurehead.

                  "And you, Mr Milosevic, as the supreme commander, you
could have come down there a bit and to see
                  what it was like for us, and you were issuing these
shameful orders to be carried out."

                  Had he been promised anything?, Milosevic wanted to
know.

                  "Mr Milosevic, I am here of my own free will, and I
said that before. Mr Milosevic, when I tell this truth to
                  the person who, in my opinion, is the most responsible
for all these crimes, that already makes me feel
                  better. I need no further promises," witness K41
replied.

                                   Serbian News Network - SNN

                                        [EMAIL PROTECTED]

                                    http://www.antic.org/

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