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Bosnian Serbs pray for Karadzic, say charges unjust


Sat Jul 26, 2008 2:36pm EDT

By Maja Zuvela

PALE, Bosnia (Reuters) - Hundreds of people gathered to pray for Radovan
Karadzic across the Serb half of Bosnia on Saturday, holding vigils inside
churches or marching in protest at his arrest on war crimes charges.

The leader of the Bosnian Serbs in the 1992-95 Bosnia war was indicted for
genocide by the United Nations tribunal in The Hague. He was arrested in
Serbia last week after 11 years on the run and now awaits extradition,
likely in the coming week.

The mostly elderly supporters filed quietly into churches, lit candles and
prayed silently for Karadzic to have strength in his trial. Others held his
picture and banners reading: "We are with you".

"We are here to support him, and show how much bitterness we feel at this
arrest," said Miladin Ilic, 69, an ethnic Serb former resident of Sarajevo
who now lives in Pale, one of the main cities in the autonomous Serb
Republic.

"We Serbs have suffered for centuries, and this arrest brings a great shock
and more sorrow to the Serb people."

Karadzic and his military commander Ratko Mladic are indicted for genocide
over the 43-month siege of Sarajevo and the 1995 Srebrenica massacre of
8,000 Bosnian Muslims. Mladic and another war crimes suspect are still at
large.

Most Bosnian Serbs see both Karadzic and Mladic as heroic defenders of the
Serb nation and say the charges against them are false accusations founded
on anti-Serb propaganda.

"More than 200 Bosnian Serb war veterans are ready to testify in The Hague
that Karadzic is innocent, and prove that there was also Serb victims in
that war," said Slavko Jovicic, member of a veterans' association, who was
marching in support of Karadzic. "We are at the court's disposal."

Some in the crowd criticised Bosnian authorities for not allowing Karadzic's
family, who live in Pale, to visit him in prison. The travel documents of
Karadzic's wife, daughter and son were seized in an effort to choke off his
support network.

Bosnia's peace overseer Miroslav Lajcak has said a travel ban on the family
will remain in force until it is certain any visit to Karadzic would not
influence proceedings against him.

"Lajcak should be expelled, he is showing no support to the Serbian people,"
said one woman who was holding Karadzic's picture and shouting: "Radovan is
our hero". "It is outrageous that they won't let his family go to see him."

The earliest Karadzic can be extradited is Monday, Serbian authorities have
said. His lawyer Svetozar Vujacic declined on Saturday to say whether or
when he had filed an appeal. "I was instructed by Radovan Karadzic to say
nothing," he said.

Serbia's closer ties with the European Union depend on its facing up to its
war crimes past and delivering remaining war crime fugitives to the U.N.
court.

(Additional reporting by Ivana Sekularac; Writing by Ellie Tzortzi; Editing
by Janet Lawrence)

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