"The Milosevic Era Has Returned."

In an interview with SPIEGEL, Vldan Batic, 56, the former Serbian Justice
Minister, talks about how biased the justice system still is in his troubled
nation and how the shadow of former President Slobodan Milosevic continues
to hover. 


 
AP
Even while on trial for war crimes, Milosevic may still be pulling the
strings in Serbia. 
Slobodan Milosevic, first became president of Yugoslavia in 1989, but many
say his influence is still felt. Currently, he is in the Netherlands, facing
charges of war crimes at The Hague. In his first six years in power,
Milosevic ignited conflicts in Croatia (1991) and Bosnia (1992) during which
thousands of civilians died. In 1997, he earned international disdain when
he brutally repressed Kosovo's ethnic Albanian residents. In 2000, he
relinquished the presidency to Vojislav Kostunia, but only under popular
pressure.

SPIEGEL: In a surprising move, a Serbian court revoked international arrest
warrants for former president Slobodan Milosevic's wife Mira Markovic and
his son Marko. Already the Serbian people were irate that charges against
Marko for allegedly harassing his father's political opponents were dropped
and that financial corruption charges against Mira Markovic were dismissed.
Some say the dropping of the charges was an inside deal. Is Milosovic once
again ruling the nation, this time from his cell at The Hague war crimes
court? 

Batic: For everyone who lives in Serbia, one thing is clear: The Milosevic
era has returned. Almost all of the most important posts in the nation are
once again filled with Milosevic's cronies. In Milosevic's wife's case, the
chief prosecutor issued "an obligatory order" to his deputy to drop the
arrest warrants. Such an order is a first in our judicial history. Behind it
all was a deal between Milosevic and Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica.
Kostunica remains in power thanks to the votes of the Socialist
parliamentarians, whose party Milosevic once led.


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SPIEGEL: Marko allegedly controlled illicit cigarette smuggling. He was
arrested after he allegedly threatened an opposition member with a chainsaw.
Now, the defendant has taken back the charges.

Batic: What else can the man do? His mother wrote me a letter in which her
terror was clear: Marko's friend threatened him and his family day and
night. 

SPIEGEL: How seriously can we take the promises to track down and arrest the
two most searched-for war criminals, General Ratko Mladic and Radovan
Kadadzic?

Batic: Mladic is often in Serbia, mostly in Belgrade. He -- just like other
war criminals -- is still being protected by the army, the church and
Kostunica. And I don't just mean morally. All of those who have given
themselves up as war criminals to the Hague have received up to ?500,000
compensation. It's being financed by four business magnates who then are
compensated by the Serbian government with lucrative deals.

SPIEGEL: The government of the assassinated Prime Minister, Zoran Djindjic
which you belonged to, also knew about Mladic's trips to Belgrade. Why
didn't you arrest him?


 
DPA
A mass grave containing the remains of Muslims killed in Kosovo. 
Batic: He had the support of the army, not the government. The police could
not initiate a war against the army.

SPIEGEL: Djindjic was killed in 2003 and the case against his alleged
assassin is threatening to become a farce. Not long ago, the state
prosecutor was replaced.

Batic That's because he would not be influenced by the government's attempts
to water down the evidence. A few people holding cabinet posts today were
directly involved in the killing. That's why the government is waffling on
the case.

SPIEGEL: The case has focused completely on one suspect and legitimate
questions about his accomplices have been totally ignored. Why?

Batic: The reasons are well known. They were people who had no political
perspective under Djindjic -- a group of criminals like the ones sitting in
The Hague. The plot was organized by the state and military secret service.
The patriarch blessed the plot using the logic that Djindjic was a traitor
and it's no sin to murder a traitor. 


C SPIEGEL ONLINE 2005
All Rights Reserved
Reproduction only allowed with the permission of SPIEGELnet GmbH

http://service.spiegel.de/cache/international/0,1518,370952,00.html









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