If this man is a war criminal where is all the evidence?

by John Laughland  

24 August 2002, Mail on Sunday


In the great film with Marlene Dietrich and Charles Laughton, the “Witness for 
the Prosecution” appears in court and gives exactly the opposite testimony from 
what was expected.  You would not know it from our media - which passed over 
the event in silence - but the same thing happened at The Hague recently, in 
the most important war crimes trial since Nuremberg, that of the former 
Yugoslav president, Slobodan Milosevic.  One of the prosecution’s star 
witnesses said precisely the opposite of what he was supposed to say, dealing 
what seemed like a fatal blow to a prosecution case which was already reeling 
from several previous blunders.

 

The star witness in question was Rade Markovic, the former head of the Yugoslav 
secret services.  Before he appeared in the witness box, the media universally 
hailed him as the insider who would finally give the clinching testimony that 
Milosevic had personally ordered the persecution of the ethnic Albanian 
population of Kosovo.  This is the single issue which NATO uses to justify its 
otherwise illegal attacks on Yugoslavia: without it, the moral justification 
for NATO's war in 1999 completely disappears.

 

The urge to hear Markovic's testimony was all the greater because the 
prosecution's last "star witness" had been a severe embarrassment. Ratomir 
Tanic had presented himself as another "insider", and had claimed that he had 
actually been present when Milosevic gave the genocidal order.  Under 
cross-examination, however, Tanic was shown to be an agent of the secret 
services of various Western countries, and to be so unfamiliar with the 
corridors of power that he could not even say what floor in the presidential 
palace Milosevic's office had been on.

 

The embarrassment over Tanic was equalled only by that caused when an    
Albanian witness produced a list of names, which he alleged was of Albanians 
whom the Serb police were to execute.  On closer examination, the list turned 
out to be a fake:  the spelling mistakes were so numerous that only an Albanian 
could have written them.

 

Enter, therefore, Radomir Markovic, the secret police chief who knew more about 
what was going on in Yugoslavia than anyone else.  But, in painstakingly 
detailed testimony lasting nearly three hours, he told the court that Milosevic 
had never ordered the expulsion of the Albanian population of Kosovo; that the 
former president had repeatedly issued instructions to the police and the army 
to respect the laws of war, and    to protect the civilian population, even if 
it meant compromising the battle against Albanian terrorists;  and that the 
mass exodus of Albanians during the Nato bombing was caused not by Serb forces 
but instead by the Kosovo Liberation Army itself, which needed a constant flow 
of refugees to maintain the support of Western public opinion for the Nato 
campaign.


"Did you ever get any kind of report," Milosevic asked him,"or have you ever 
heard of an order, to expel Albanians from Kosovo?" "No, I never heard of such 
an order.  Nobody ever ordered for Albanians from Kosovo to be expelled," 
Markovic replied.  "Did you receive any information about any plan, suggestion 
or de facto influence that Albanians were to be expelled?" asked Milosevic.  
Reply:  "No, I never heard of such a suggestion to expel Albanians from 
Kosovo."  "At the meetings you attended, is it true that completely the 
opposite is said, namely that we always insisted that civilians be protected, 
and that they not be hurt in the process of anti-terrorist operations?"  
"Certainly," said the witness. "The task was not only to protect Serbs but also 
Albanian civilians."  "Is it not true that we tried to persuade the flow of 
refugees to stay at home, and that the army and police would protect them?" the 
former president asked. "Yes, that was the instruction and those were th!
 e assignments."  "Do you know that the Kosovo Liberation Army told people to 
leave, and to stage an exodus?" "Yes," said Markovic.  "I am aware of that."

    

      The media greeted this stunning evidence with complete silence.  Indeed, 
it even failed to report the most extraordinary assertion of all made by 
Markovic, namely that he had effectively been tortured by the new pro-Western 
authorities in Belgrade, in order to make him testify against Milosevic.  
Markovic claimed that the new Minister of the    Interior in the Western-backed 
government in Belgrade had taken him out to dinner and offered him release from 
prison - where he has been incarcerated for over a year now - and a new 
identity in a country of his choice, if only he would agree to testify against 
his former boss at The Hague. As Slobodan Milosevic tried to point out in his 
cross-examination - until he was interrupted by the judge, that is - it clearly 
falls under the terms of the United Nations' definition of "torture" to 
imprison someone in order to force them to co-operate.  Markovic also alleged 
that the Tribunal's own prosecutors had falsified and embellished !
 the written statement he had given them.


        These were amazing allegations.  With them, the whole prosecution case 
seemed to crumble.  But even more stunning was the reaction of the British 
presiding judge, Sir Richard May.  A judge is supposed to be a neutral arbiter 
between the prosecution and the defence:  May, by contrast, has distinguished 
himself throughout the trial by his    belligerence towards Milosevic, who is 
conducting his own defence, and in particular for his habit of interrupting 
Milosevic, even sometimes switching off his microphone, whenever the former 
Yugoslav leader's cross-examination shows up inconsistencies in a witness' 
evidence.


        As May listened to Markovic, he tried desperately to stop him making 
these allegations against the Prosecutors and their allies in Belgrade.  When 
Markovic began to describe his ordeal at the hands of the new Yugoslav 
government, May silenced him, saying to Milosevic, “This does not appear to 
have relevance to the evidence which the
witness has given here.  We are not going to litigate here with what happened 
to him (i.e. Markovic) in Yugoslavia when he was arrested."  And when Milosevic 
insisted that the Tribunal's own investigators had falsified Markovic's written 
evidence, May interrupted him tartly by saying,  "That is not a comment which 
it is proper for you to make."  In Judge May's book, therefore, it is 
irrelevant if the prosecution is lying, or if it is an accomplice to torture.


      Judge Richard May is no stranger to political activity,  like the 
prosecutor, Geoffrey Nice, he is a committed Socialist:  he stood as a Labour 
Party candidate for Finchley in the general election in 1979, where his 
Conservative opponent was none other than Margaret Thatcher. As a judge on the 
Midlands Circuit in the 1980s, he would dine out on this story, for which he 
enjoyed the admiration of his left-wing colleagues.  But even this happy 
admission of political bias could not have prepared anyone for the way he would 
react to Markovic's shocking claims.

 

It gets worse.  The Tribunal's priorities now seem so distorted that they see 
Milosevic's "political crime" of resisting NATO as worse than the crimes of 
physically torturing people to death.  On 31st July, the Tribunal ordered the 
release from custody of a man called Milojica Kos.  Kos had served four years 
of a six-year sentence for murder, torture and persecution as a guard at the 
notorious Omarska camp in Bosnia, which was compared at the time to a Nazi 
concentration camp.  But the president of the Tribunal, Claude Jorda, said that 
Kos would be released early because of "his wish to reintegrate himself into 
society, his determination not to re-offend, his irreproachable conduct in 
detention, his attachment to his family, and the possibility of exercising a 
profession again." No such tolerance will be shown to Milosevic.


      These events have provided spectacular proof of what critics have always 
said - that the International Criminal Tribunal is a political kangaroo court 
in the hands of the West.  But political manipulation can work both ways.  Tony 
Blair has been a vigorous supporter of a clone of the Yugoslav tribunal, the 
new International Criminal Court.  But why shouldn't the new court be as 
politicised as the present one?  Plenty of anti-Western countries, like Iran, 
Sudan and Zimbabwe, have signed the new ICC treaty.  If they decided to 
prosecute Tony Blair for attacking Iraq, say, there is little to stop them  - 
especially since the ICC defines "aggression" as a war crime.  On his next trip 
abroad, therefore, Mr. Blair might be wise to pack his toothbrush.

http://www.bhhrg.org/default.asp


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