http://www.maltatoday.com.mt/2009/09/20/t8.html

MALTA TODAY

Sunday, 20 September 2009

Malta replies to Karadzic, but invokes ‘confidentiality’
Karl Stagno-Navarra

The Maltese government has invoked “confidentiality” in its formal response
to a request for information made by former Bosnian-Serb leader Radovan
Karadzic, currently held in detention at The Hague and awaiting trial for
genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes stemming from the war in
Bosnia during 1991-1995.

The government has filed its response to Karadzic’s third request for
information from Valletta, this time for information about the “alleged”
involvement of Maltese national Meinrad Calleja and Italian national Ciro
del Negro in gun running to the Bosnian Muslim army during the Balkan wars.

Karadzic asked Malta to produce all information on the “shipment of arms,
ammunition or military equipment to the Bosnian Muslims in 1992-95 such as
that engaged in by Meinrad Calleja and Ciro del Negro, including material
used in proceedings to exclude del Negro from Malta such as intercepted
conversations in which the arms smuggling was discussed.”

The United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia
(ICTY) issued a binding order, giving the government just a week to produce
all information in its possession about Calleja and del Negro, the latter
expelled from Malta in 1995.

The government’s response was filed on September 11, the day the binding
order expired.

While the ICTY’s judges upheld Malta’s request to have the information
submitted to Karadzic bound by confidentiality, sources confirmed that the
four-page reply contains references to investigations conducted by the
Maltese and Italian security services during the time of the Bosnian war.
“The document had minor references to Meinrad Calleja but a lot on Ciro del
Negro, including details that led to a government decision to expel del
Negro from Malta.”

But the reply also recommended Karadzic to enquire further on these
investigations with the Italian government, who reportedly is in possession
of telephone conversation transcripts and other material relating to the
alleged arms smuggling to the former war-torn region.

The request made by Karadzic was reportedly the subject of a meeting between
senior officials from the Office of the Prime Minister, the Foreign Office
and the Ministry for Home affairs, who in turn asked the Attorney General
for guidance.

The police and the Security Service have also been reported to be involved
in the evaluation of the sensitive request.

Meinrad Calleja was arrested by the police in 1995 and sentenced in 2001 to
15 years’ imprisonment after being found guilty on four counts of cocaine
trafficking, conspiracy to drug trafficking and cocaine possession during
and before November 1993. In February 2004, he was acquitted of
masterminding the attempted murder of Richard Cachia Caruana, then the
private assistant to Prime Minister Eddie Fenech Adami.

Prior to his arrest in 1995, the security services had photographed Calleja
in Sliema with Ciro del Negro, then employed as a seaman with Virtu Ferries.
Known as a wheeler-dealer, del Negro was implicated in a number of cases,
however no charges were ever brought against him by the police for lack of
concrete evidence. He was suddenly ordered to leave the country in March
1995, after being declared as a ‘persona non-grata’ by the authorities.

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