Canada: Serb accused of war crimes to appear in court 13 November 2007 | 11:43 
| Source: The Windsor Star WINDSOR -- An Ontario truck driver accused of war 
crimes from 16 years ago will make a court appearance. 

Goran Pavić, 42, is alleged to have served with a Serb paramilitary force 
involved in an ethnic-cleansing operation in eastern Croatia between 1991-1992.

The sister of Pavić, who is facing deportation to Croatia, says her brother is 
the victim of political persecution and hopes the Canadian government will 
intervene. 

Pavić was arrested Wednesday while crossing the Ambassador Bridge in his truck 
filled with soap and benches destined for Alabama and Florida. 

U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents noticed the long-haul trucker's name 
on an Interpol wanted list. He remains in a Detroit jail awaiting his first 
court appearance, scheduled for today, according to news reports. 

"He is innocent," Gorana Krstić said in a phone interview Monday. "The only bad 
thing my brother has done was that he was born in the wrong place in the wrong 
time, because he's Serbian from Croatia." 

A criminal complaint filed to the U.S. District Court by assistant United 
States attorney Karen Reynolds alleges that, according to a Croatian court 
ruling in 2006, Pavić and others tried to prevent Croatian citizens from 
remaining in an area of his hometown of Vukovar. 

"The Croatian population was subject to physical abuse," the criminal complaint 
alleges. "Specifically, Pavić forced a large number of civilians into hard 
labour and made them leave their homes by burning down their houses. Pavić and 
a co-defendant also entered a house and beat a man. Pavić and his co-defendants 
forced civilians to exit buses at gunpoint. Thirty-five of those persons are 
still missing." 

Krstić said her brother came to Canada 10 years ago, has no record, has been a 
Canadian citizen for five years, and is married with a 20-year-old daughter and 
18-year-old triplet sons. She said he drives a truck and that for years he has 
crossed into the United States "at least two times a week." 

She noted that Pavić even has a U.S. government FAST pass to get across the 
border faster, for which he provided fingerprints and underwent a security 
check. 

Krstić said her brother had been held for more than a day before she managed to 
track him down, thanks to a global positioning device in his truck and many 
phone calls. She has since spoken to Pavić by phone but says her brother has 
not had access to a lawyer. 

Catherine Gagnaire, a spokeswoman for Foreign Affairs in Ottawa, said Monday 
the government is aware that a Canadian citizen was arrested in Detroit but, 
citing privacy laws, would say nothing except to say consular assistance is 
being provided. 

Krstić called the Croatian accusations political. She noted that her brother 
was only charged with being a war criminal in 2006, almost a decade after he 
had already left the country -- where she said he worked as a truck driver, not 
a soldier. 

She also believes that Croatia adds names to its war criminals list without 
proof of wrongdoing and includes so many as to make the accusations 
"ridiculous." 

"They are trying to scare as many Serbian people as they can so that we never 
go back to Croatia, so that we never go and ask for our land and houses back," 
Krstić said. "We lost so much. I lost my childhood. I lost my friends. 

"I lived there for 20 years and all of a sudden I'm an enemy. I'm an enemy in 
my home town. That's devastating." 

Human Rights Watch, an international social justice group, also considers the 
list of Croatian war criminals suspect. 

The Human Rights Watch website says: "Since the hostilities in 1991, the 
Ministry of Justice of the Croatian government has maintained lists of 
suspected Serb war criminals, numbering as many as 3,000 at one point. These 
'official' lists have frequently been criticized for inaccuracies and 
uncertainties."

http://www.b92.net/eng/news/crimes-article.php?yyyy=2007&mm=11&dd=13&nav_id=45347


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