[But however independently it may function as a judicial institution,
the tribunal - as a body set up by the UN - cannot avoid being used
for political purposes by some of the UN's member-states. ]
 
BBC News
 
Analysis: Hague court's changing role 
By Gabriel Partos 
BBC South-East Europe analyst 


When the United Nations decided 12 years ago to set up the
International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, the move
was widely seen as an admission of failure.

Sceptics argued it was no more than a fig leaf to cover up the
international community's failure to take action to prevent war crimes
and genocide in the Balkans.

The war in Bosnia-Hercegovina - the bloodiest in Europe since World
War II - was still raging seemingly without an end, but the major
powers remained divided over the issue of military intervention.

In the face of public pressure for some kind of action, the UN's
decision to set up a tribunal appeared to be a salve for guilty
consciences.

Cynics added that it was hardly likely to work since there was, at the
time, no outside force prepared to apprehend those who were to be
charged with war crimes.

Dayton success 

That view was shared by the warring sides. 

















The tribunal's establishment had little - if any - deterrent effect.
Some of the worst crimes, most notably the Srebrenica massacre of more
than 7,500 Bosnian Muslims, were committed in 1995 - after the
tribunal had opened for business.

Yet with the Dayton accords which ended the war in Bosnia in December
1995, the tribunal began to come into its own.

Dayton itself disproved one of the arguments directed against the
tribunal - that if it indicted some of the leaders, they would have a
strong personal interest in prolonging the war, lest they should be
handed over to the tribunal afterwards.

But the indictment of the Bosnian Serb leader, Radovan Karadzic, and
his military commander General Ratko Mladic did not prove an obstacle
to a deal - they were simply replaced by other leaders at the peace
talks.

Initially, the tribunal was able to secure the surrender of only minor
figures: the prominent leaders were still being sheltered by their
associates.

'Real change' 

But gradually, as the Nato-led peacekeepers tightened their hold on
Bosnia, more important indictees began to be arrested, while others
gave themselves up.

















The real change came with the death of Croatia's nationalist President
Franjo Tudjman in 1999, which led to the emergence of a more
co-operative administration in Zagreb; and even more significantly,
with the fall of the authoritarian Yugoslav President, Slobodan
Milosevic, in 2000, which made it possible to put him on trial as well
as some of his closest associates.

By the beginning of the decade, the tribunal had been transformed from
an unpromising experiment into a fully-fledged institution of
international justice.

It was able to perform several functions, most notably, in meting out
justice, regardless of however powerful the defendants may once have
been.

As a result, it was also beginning to develop perhaps something of a
deterrent effect - not in Kosovo in 1999, but more perceptible in the
behaviour of combatants in Macedonia in 2001.

Besides, it was giving a practical demonstration of the principle that
guilt should be attached to individuals, not collectively to nations
or ethnic groups.

Political armoury 

However, that principle has yet to gain wide acceptance in the
Balkans; and the expectation that the tribunal would serve
inter-ethnic reconciliation also remains in large part unfulfilled.

More recently, the tribunal's role has expanded considerably in
another area - it has become a powerful weapon of conditionality in
the political armoury of the major foreign partners of the former
Yugoslav republics.

Wednesday's decision by EU foreign ministers to postpone the start of
Croatia's EU accession talks was based on the assessment of the
tribunal's chief prosecutor Carla Del Ponte, who argued that Zagreb
was failing to co-operate in tracking down the Croatian General Ante
Gotovina who was indicted for war crimes four years ago.

The EU is due to complete a feasibility study by the end of this month
on whether it should launch talks with Serbia and Montenegro leading
to the conclusion of a Stabilisation and Association Agreement, or
SAA.

Final indictment 

Although Belgrade is several steps behind Zagreb in terms of European
integration, it, too, faces conditionality in relation to its
compliance with the tribunal's requests.

And the EU is putting pressure on the Serb authorities to ensure that
the remaining 16 fugitives from justice - several of whom are in
Serbia - are handed over to the tribunal.

Conditionality in relation to the tribunal has been used by the US
administration for several years - most notably in cutting of
financial assistance to the Belgrade government.

One reason it has now been adopted by the EU is that as the prospect
of closer links with the EU, or even membership, becomes more
realistic, the former Yugoslav republics become more amenable to
pressures of this kind.

For its part, the tribunal doesn't want to be portrayed as a political
instrument.

Its purpose is the administration of justice which it carries out in
the manner of an independent judiciary.

This week, it has issued its final indictment, involving former
Macedonian interior minister Ljube Boskovski - making a grand total of
160 indictments for war crimes.

But however independently it may function as a judicial institution,
the tribunal - as a body set up by the UN - cannot avoid being used
for political purposes by some of the UN's member-states.



































Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/europe/4358849.stm


Published: 2005/03/17 17:46:52 GMT

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