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What Will Karadzic Trial Draw From Milosevic Case?


Some believe it’s a chance for the tribunal to redeem itself, while others
feel the Hague court did little wrong.

By Caroline Tosh in London (TU No 563, 08-Aug-08)

As prosecutors in The Hague gear up for the trial of Radovan Karadzic,
observers are divided as to what lessons can be learnt from the case of
former Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic.

Some see the trial of the former Bosnian Serb leader as a chance for the
United Nations-backed International Criminal Tribunal for the former
Yugoslavia, ICTY, to redeem itself after failing to secure a conviction
against the man believed to be most responsible for sparking the wars of the
Nineties which tore the region apart. 

“Karadzic case offers court a chance to repair its image,” said a Washington
Post piece on July 24, which argued that “Milosevic at times seemed to be in
control of his own trial, turning normally sombre proceedings into a
freewheeling forum in order to air his many political grievances”.

Others, however, defend the Milosevic proceedings at the ICTY, saying the
problems and delays encountered were largely unavoidable. 

The Milosevic case ended abruptly in March 2006, four years into the trial,
when the accused was found dead in his cell in the Hague detention unit,
causing bitter disappointment for thousands of survivors of the Balkans
wars.

In the wake of the trial’s collapse, critics lined up to condemn the work of
tribunal prosecutors and judges. The case, they argued, was overly long and
complex and Milosevic, who represented himself, was given too much leeway by
judges to give political speeches, and he made a mockery of the court.

Karadzic, who faces charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity,
including genocide, was president of Republika Srpska, RS, the self-declared
Bosnian Serb territory. That makes him the highest-level figure to appear at
The Hague since Milosevic. 

When the spectre of the Milosevic trial was raised at a recent press
conference in The Hague, chief prosecutor Serge Brammertz told reporters he
planned to conduct the Karadzic proceedings efficiently.

“Of course it will take some months before the prosecution and defence will
be ready to start. It will be a complex trial but we are fully aware of the
importance of being efficient,” he said.

PROBLEMS WITH SELF-REPRESENTATION

One of the greatest challenges facing the Milosevic trial chamber was
dealing with problems caused by the defendant’s decision to represent
himself – which Karadzic has also signalled his intention to do.

Judges were accused of allowing Milosevic to get away with too much as he
conducted his own defence.

Meanwhile, the proceedings were dragged out because of the defendant’s
chronic health problems, which caused repeated adjournments to the trial.

While most agree the option of self-representation is an essential right,
some believe that judges could have done more to rein in Milosevic’s
frequent outbursts. In the course of the trial, the former president showed
continued defiance for proceedings, at times prompting presiding Judge
Richard May to switch off his microphone.

“A major failing of the system was exposed in the conduct of the Milosevic
trial, where the considerable degree of lenience offered to the defendant
proved counter-productive,” said Dr Carole Hodge, author of Britain and the
Balkans.

Hodge believes the judges’ leniency allowed Milosevic to obfuscate and
prevaricate when presenting his case, and ultimately tarnished the court’s
reputation.

She argues that Milosevic seized on self-representation as an opportunity to
promote his own views, reinforce support amongst Serbian nationalists, and
pressure prosecution witnesses. 

It is not in the interests of the court that this be repeated in the
Karadzic trial, she said.

Robert Donia, a historian and ICTY expert, agreed that the Karadzic trial
chamber should exercise a firmer hand to ensure that the defendant “is
acting as a lawyer and not as the client in the courtroom”.

However, Sir Geoffrey Nice, a former prosecutor in the Milosevic trial,
defended the conduct of judges during proceedings against the former
president.

“The judges' priority is to… respect the defendant's right to defend
himself. One of their methods of doing that was to say to him – he being an
intelligent man, a lawyer and a banker and everything else – you’ve got two
hours, three hours, four hours, two days to cross examine this witness, and
crucially, it’s a matter for you how you spend your time,” he said. 

“You have to think how much worse it might have looked if they’d been
jumping down his throat the whole time, saying you can’t ask this, you can’t
ask that. That would have been to deprive him much more publicly and
obviously of a fair trial.”

Nice argues that to some extent, Milosevic’s self-representation proved
counter productive.

Among other things, the former president failed to display the legalistic
neutrality required when dealing with potentially significant points, and
missed opportunities to point to the lack of a connection between himself
and certain crimes.

“By doing things that people think were political speeches, he took bad
points and he revealed things about himself, which in fact, had he conducted
the case in a more measured way and been more careful to take good points,
might never have emerged,” said Nice.

“So he emerged as…a bully, and intolerant, unamusing – and that may have
worked to his disadvantage.”

Experts also point out that there is a limit to how much judges can
intervene when a suspect is representing himself without affecting the
quality of justice. 

“A lot of the things that are constantly being bandied about in the media,
like for instance, telling [a suspect] to shut up, or limiting his ability
to rant about particular events are not actually doable,” said Dr Jonathan
Eyal, director of international security studies at the Royal United
Services Institute in London.

Eyal said it is important – particularly when there has been a 12-year wait
to see Karadzic in the dock – that justice is seen to be done, and that the
accused is given adequate time to present his case.

“I would say that attention to procedure and a rather relaxed view giving Mr
Karadzic the necessary time even if it means ranting is, I would submit,
important,” he said.

“I believe that it is better for the court to move slowly than for it to
appear to be moving fast. This is one case where seeing justice done is
probably more important than justice being done.”

It is also vital to show people in Serbia, where the court is seen as being
biased against Serb defendants, that tribunal procedures are fair and the
verdict is not a foregone conclusion. 

“[ICTY] has to persuade ordinary Serbs that regardless of what happened to
Milosevic, the trial of Karadzic…, despite all the years of him as a
fugitive and despite all the frustration, will be a normal trial with the
individual presumed to be innocent,” said Eyal.

Karadzic has already used his first appearance before the tribunal to revive
claims that he was offered a deal by the United States to withdraw from
political life, in return for escaping a Hague trial.

“He must be seen to be airing all that he wants to air, including all the
conspiracy theories, like the promises that he supposedly got from the
Americans,” said Eyal, adding that such rumours had no bearing on the case.

“It doesn’t really matter if he brings new ones all the time but he
shouldn’t be allowed to chew over them like a dried-up curd forever more,
which is what we used to have with Mr Milosevic.”

Observers point out that in the six-and-a-half years since the start of the
Milosevic trial, the court has gained a great deal of experience in dealing
with problems associated with accused individuals representing themselves,
and this is likely to prove invaluable during the Karadzic case.

“Experience is hugely valuable, and the court now has a whole lot more
experience with the problems of unrepresented defendants that they didn’t
have in the Milosevic case – it was a new problem,” said Nice.

SIMPLER INDICTMENT

Perhaps the greatest challenge encountered by Milosevic prosecutors was the
sheer size of the case against the accused, which comprised 66 counts
relating to Bosnia, Croatia and Kosovo.

While the indictment against Karadzic is currently being reviewed and
updated, the last version from 2000 lists just 11 counts of crimes committed
in Bosnia. Unlike Milosevic, Karadzic has not been accused of taking part in
a conspiracy, or so-called “joint criminal enterprise”, an extremely
difficult charge to prove.

When the case against Milosevic collapsed with his death, his
court-appointed lawyer Steven Kay wrote in the British newspaper The Times
of the difficulties of dealing with a trial of “impossible size”.

Others say the decision to divide the enormous list of crimes into three
geographical areas, rather than considering them chronologically, created
major problems during the trial.

“I don't think that the, let's say, modus operandi of Milosevic ever came
out clearly as it might have if the trial had proceeded to look at his
career chronologically and look more closely at the antecedents of the kind
of things he ended up doing,” said Donia.

As the case against Karadzic is far smaller and more straightforward, many
of the problems encountered by the Milosevic prosecutors should be avoided.

“I think the challenge, in a sense, is not going to be quite as great,” he
said. “I think if the prosecutors are wise – and I have a great deal of
confidence in them – when they prosecute the trial, I think they'll seize on
that and use a lot of very direct evidence.”

Observers argue that the Karadzic trial poses very different challenges to
that of Milosevic, partly because of the types of personality involved and
the way the two men operated politically.

Early on in the conflict, Karadzic was much more forthright and explicit
about what he was intending to do, and his words have been disseminated in a
wide variety of sources, said Donia.

Since Karadzic’s capture, there have been growing concerns that in a bid to
streamline the case, prosecutors may remove the genocide charge relating to
the initial phase of conflict, in 1991 and 1992, leaving it in place only
for Srebrenica, the massacre of some 8,000 men and boys in July 1995.
Prosecutors might seek to focus the case on Srebrenica because the crimes
committed there have already been classed as genocide by both the ICTY and
the International Criminal Court, ICC.

During the earlier period of 1991-92, Karadzic’s indictment says, non-Serbs
were allegedly expelled from their villages and forced to live in camps
“under conditions of life calculated to bring about the physical destruction
in whole or in part of those national, ethnical, racial or religious
groups”. 

Olga Kavran, spokesperson for the Office of the Prosecutor, refused to
speculate on any amendments to Karadzic’s indictment that might be currently
being considered.

In the last several months, a number of indictments at the Hague tribunal
have been trimmed after judges asked prosecutors to remove counts, or fix
the number of crime scenes – apparently to ensure “fair and expeditious
trials”.

Donia said that dropping the earlier genocide charges against Karadzic would
be a mistake, “I believe that [the Karadzic trial] is their best shot to
prove [that genocide occurred in Bosnia in 1992] and I think even more so
than in the case of Mladic, they will have the evidence at hand to prove
mens rea [genocidal intent] and the various deeds which were effectively
carrying out that intent.”

There has also been speculation that Karadzic’s indictment could be altered
to incorporate a joint criminal enterprise component to link his alleged
crimes back to Belgrade and Milosevic.

Observers note that the charge sheet against General Ratko Mladic, who was
in command of all Bosnian Serb army, identifies Karadzic along with
Milosevic as a member of a joint criminal enterprise which aimed to
eliminate or permanently remove non-Serbs from large areas of Bosnia through
the commission of crimes. 

According to Nice, this vital link between Karadzic and Belgrade must be
incorporated into the case.

“[The indictment] needs to be expanded to take account of the criminality of
Milosevic and the involvement of… Milosevic and Belgrade in these crimes,”
he said.

“In order to lay out the history of Srebrenica, you need to have evidence of
what part Milosevic took in it. They might [add that in]. I think they
probably may do.”

Donia, however, sees no need to link Karadzic to Milosevic, and urges
prosecutors not to go down this road.

“The Milosevic trial is a thing of the past, and his guilt or innocence not
being definitively established, it’s much easier – more advisable – to focus
on Karadzic as an individual perpetrator rather than trying to weave a
complex web around him, when in fact – at least for most of the war – he was
the primary perpetrator,” he said.

“To me, there’s no judicial utility to linking him to Milosevic and
Belgrade, beyond what is necessary to establish that it provided him with
perhaps some of the means to carry out what he did.”

Caroline Tosh is an IWPR editor in London. 

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