Karadzic calls alleged crimes myths 

 



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Karadzic faces possible life imprisonment if
convicted by the court in The Hague [AFP]

Radovan Karadzic, the wartime Bosnian Serb leader, has told judges at his 
genocide trial that the worst alleged crimes during the Bosnian war are "myths".

He told judges in The Hague on Tuesday that the siege of Sarajevo and the 
murder of thousands of Muslims at Srebrenica were staged or fabricated to 
vilify the Serbs.

In the second day of his opening statement, Karadzic urged UN prosecutors to 
review their genocide indictment against him, which he said was riddled with 
false evidence.

Karadzic also won a minor victory from the court, which granted him permission 
to appeal its earlier refusal to delay the trial until mid-June.

'Cunning strategy'

Karadzic, who is facing 11 counts of genocide, war crimes and crimes against 
humanity, is accused of orchestrating the siege of Sarajevo, in which the 
city's inhabitants were terrorised by sniping and shelling for 44 months.

About 10,000 people were killed in that time and many more wounded.

But in detailing what he called the "myths" of the conflict, Karadzic told the 
court the blockade of Sarajevo could not be classified as a siege and came 
about as a result of Muslims killing each other.

He said the deaths in Sarajevo were the result of a "cunning strategy" by young 
Bosnian Muslims "aimed at bringing in foreign troops and foreign intervention".

"They shelled their own people and killed their own people from snipers," 
Karadzic said.

Barnaby Phillips, Al Jazeera's correspondent in The Hague, said: "Karadzic said 
it wasn't a siege at all, they [the Serbs] were allowing plenty of humanitarian 
aid into the city.

"He acknowledged that Serbs had been accused of firing at civilian targets on 
many, many occasions in Sarajevo.

"But he said that these incidents were either faked or that sometimes the Serbs 
had to fire at schools or museums because the Muslims had stationed military 
positions there."

Srebrenica denial

Karadzic also dismissed the killing of more than 7,000 Muslim men and boys at 
Srebrenica in 1995, described by prosecutors as the worst atrocity in Europe 
since World War Two, as a fiction concocted by Muslims.

He said that they had used bodies gathered into mass graves to cast blame on 
Serbian forces.

        

Karadzic told the court that the Bosnian wars during the 1990s were 'just and 
holy'

"It is going to be easy from me to prove that I had nothing to do with it," 
Karadzic said, arguing that the evidence of any killings in Srebrenica was too 
sketchy to show what had happened.

Phillips said: "He ridiculed the notion that Srebrenica had been a UN safe 
haven, he preferred to speak of it as a military stronghold where the Bosnian 
Muslim army was in force.

"And he suggested that elements within the UN peacekeeping force were smuggling 
weapons in.

"He ridiculed the figures that we often hear about Srebrenica, of 7,000 or 
8,000 people being massacred there.

"He said only 2,000 to 3,000 bodies had been uncovered and that these bodies 
were rather the result of several years of fighting and a frontline having 
fluctuated back and forth around the town of Srebrenica."

Reaction from survivors of the Srebrenica massacre, who came to The Hague to 
attend proceedings, was swift and indignant.

"He should be given the Nobel Prize for lying," said Sabra Kolenovic of the 
Mothers of Srebrenica.

'Wreaking havoc'

Karadic also told the court on Tuesday that Serbia had made several attempts to 
avoid war in the run-up to the Bosnian conflict.

Karadzic told the court that the Bosnian wars during the 1990s were 'just and 
holy'

He said that Serbs had been prepared to give up their own political assembly in 
Yugoslavia to prevent the conflict happening.

Karadzic also said that ethnic and religious tensions at the time had been 
heightened by a Muslim police force "wreaking havoc" on Serbs.

"The Serbs attempted before the beginning of the war several chances and 
options for peace and they were even prepared to give up on their own 
assembly," he said.

"There was massive, massive abuse of the joint police, the Muslim police. They 
were wreaking havoc. We can see that as testified by prosecution witnesses."

Serbia 'villainised'

Karadzic is accused of having colluded with Slobodan Milosevic, the late 
Yugoslav leader, with the aim of creating a "Greater Serbia", leading to the 
1992-95 Bosnian war in which 100,000 people were killed and 2.2 million 
displaced.

But Karadzic's opening statement has sought to reinterpret the events of the 
war.

Aljosa Milenkovic, a Serbian journalist following the trial, told Al Jazeera 
that many Serbs felt it was time for Karadzic to "tell the Serbian side to the 
world".

Speaking to Al Jazeera from Belgrade, he said: "Locals here ... feel like they 
have been villainised by the international and foreign media for the last 10 or 
15 years."

First indicted in 1995, Karadzic eluded a Nato manhunt for more than a decade 
before being caught in July 2008 in Belgrade, where he had been living as a 
new-age philosopher.

He faces possible life imprisonment if convicted in what is one of the last and 
largest cases brought to the UN war crimes tribunal for the former Yugoslavia

http://english.aljazeera.net/news/europe/2010/03/201032153835139360.html

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