Bosnia: Karadzic seeks court recess to study war diaries

The Hague, 27 May (AKI) - Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic, who has been 
charged with genocide and war crimes, has asked the United Nations Yugoslav war 
crimes tribunal for a one-month recess to study the diaries of his wartime 
general Ratko Mladic. Serbian authorities in February confiscated 3,500 pages 
of Mladic’s wartime diaries and gave them to the tribunal. 

Karadzic has been charged with 11 counts of genocide and war crimes, focusing 
on the shelling of capital Sarajevo and the massacre of 8,000 Muslims in the 
eastern town of Srebrenica in July 1995.

The same charges were brought against Mladic, but he and wartime leader of 
rebel Serbs in Croatia, Goran Hadzic, are still at large. 

The Hague tribunal has indicted 161 people for crimes allegedly committed in 
1991-1995 war that followed the disintegration of the former Yugoslavia. More 
than 60 have been sentenced to over one thousand years in jail.      

As he ended the cross examination of the seventh prosecution witness, retired 
Irish colonel Colm Doyle, on Thursday told Karadzic to read Mladic’s diaries 
before he cross-examines the next witnesses. 

The court was expected to make a ruling on his request later.

Doyle, who was European Union observer in Bosnia during the 1992-1995 war, 
accused Karadzic of indiscriminately shelling Sarajevo during 44-month siege 
and of terrorising civilian population.

Karadzic said Doyle’s testimony was “irrelevant”, because he had displayed bias 
and “selective memory” in his account

 

http://www.adnkronos.com/AKI/English/Security/?id=3.1.455483530

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