Russia: Milosevic's Death Sparks Fury With UN Tribunal 
By Claire Bigg
  
Milosevic's wife, Mira Markovic, lives in Russia 
(epa) 

The lower house of Russia's parliament on March 15 lashed out at the UN war 
crimes tribunal in The Hague, blaming it for the death of late Yugoslav 
President Slobodan Milosevic and calling for its dissolution. Over the past few 
days, a number of high-ranking political figures have spoken harshly against 
the court. What is behind Russian anger at Milosevic's death?


MOSCOW, March 16, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- Russian deputies unanimously approved a 
statement accusing the UN war crimes tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) 
of systematically applying double standards and bias since its creation in 
1993. 

The statement, which is not legally binding, dismisses the court as "useless" 
and says it is "essential" that it be immediately disbanded.

Konstantin Kosachyov, the head of the Duma's Foreign Affairs Committee and the 
man who drafted the statement, accused the international court of being 
anti-Serb. 

"The problem with the Hague tribunal is that, in line with a higher political 
task given to it, it has established once and for all who the criminals are and 
that they are in Serbia, while NATO is -- like Caesar's wife -- above 
suspicion," Kosachyov said. 

The statement came just days after the sudden death of Milosevic, who was found 
dead in his cell at The Hague on March 11. An autopsy has revealed he succumbed 
to a heart attack. 

Charges

Milosevic had been in custody since 2001. He was standing trial on 66 charges 
that included genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity committed 
during the wars in Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, and Kosovo in the 1990s. 

The death of Milosevic before the pronouncement of a final verdict came as a 
severe disappointment to many, not least his prosecutors and victims. 

Russia, however, has other reasons for being upset at Milosevic's passing. 

The former Yugoslav leader had fervent supporters among the Russian political 
establishment, particularly among nationalists and communists.

Speaking to RFE/RL's Russian Service, Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov 
cast serious doubt on the UN tribunal's legitimacy: "Even the most pro-American 
forces in Russia are now silent and ashamed, because they understand that today 
it's Milosevic, and tomorrow they may get to you. I think all responsible 
politicians and citizens are seriously asking themselves what kind of tribunal 
this is, what kind of mock trial, what kind of procedures these are, when one 
is interrogated hundreds of times for eight or 10 hours. This is enough to push 
anyone to a heart attack and to death." 

On March 15, a group of communists in St. Petersburg wrote to President 
Vladimir Putin to request that a street be renamed after Milosevic and a bust 
of him be erected in the city.

Slav Brothers

Russia and Serbia have close historical ties, are both predominantly Orthodox 
Christian, and have been allies in most of the 20th century's armed conflicts. 
Business ties between both countries also run deep.

Testifying to these warm relations, Moscow is currently home to Milosevic's 
wife, son, and brother Borislav Milosevic, who served as Yugoslav ambassador to 
Russia between 1998 and 2000. 

The Kremlin's strong aversion to international rights watchdogs, which it 
accuses of meddling in Russia's internal affairs, may also explain such 
passionate calls for the dissolution of the tribunal. Some suggest that the 
Russian authorities may also fear being hauled one day before The Hague 
tribunal for crimes against civilians in war-torn Chechnya.

Many in Russia blame the UN tribunal for Milosevic's death. 

In its statement March 15, the State Duma called for an independent 
international inquiry into the circumstances of his death. Deputies accused the 
court of "negligence or malicious intent."

The statement echoed earlier comments by Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, who on 
March 13 slammed the court for denying Milosevic permission to seek heart 
treatment in Moscow: "The Russian Federation provided the tribunal with 100 
percent state guarantees that after the completion of the treatment Milosevic 
would return to The Hague. Those guarantees were examined during a special 
session of the tribunal, which found them insufficient. Essentially they did 
not believe Russia. This can only disturb us. It can only worry us that 
Milosevic passed away shortly afterwards." 

Lavrov also said the late Yugoslav leader had sent a letter to the Foreign 
Ministry three days before dying. In the letter, he reportedly complained the 
treatment he was receiving in The Hague was harming him. 

The foreign minister dispatched a team of Russian doctors earlier this week to 
check the findings of the official autopsy. The Russian medical team later 
endorsed those findings, but raised questions about what might have caused the 
heart attack that killed Milosevic. 

Defense Witnesses

This storm of accusations is unlikely to come as much of a surprise to The 
Hague. 

Anton Nikiforov, the chief adviser to the UN's chief war crimes prosecutor 
Carla Del Ponte, told RFE/RL's Russian Service that Russia has consistently 
refused to cooperate with the tribunal: "We have asked Russia for certain 
documents connected to the Milosevic cases and to other cases, but we almost 
never received anything. Milosevic had high-ranking witnesses from Russia. When 
we asked these witnesses whether they were ready to show us some of the written 
documents supporting their testimonies -- since these documents obviously had 
an official or confidential character -- no one has been able to show them to 
us." 

Three Russian defense witnesses appeared at Milosevic's defense trial -- two 
former Russian premiers, Yevgeny Primakov and Nikolai Ryzhkov, and General 
Leonid Ivashov, who once headed the Defense Ministry's International 
Department. 

Milosevic was the sixth person charged with war crimes in the Balkans to die at 
The Hague. A week earlier, former Croatian Serb leader Milan Babic, who had 
been a key prosecution witness against Milosevic, committed suicide in the same 
prison. 

He had been sentenced in 2004 to 13 years in prison for crimes against humanity 
after pleading guilty to persecuting the non-Serb population in Croatia's 
Krajina region.



http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2006/3/f7df23e5-42ee-4eff-987e-a74ac4a6265a.html




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