Trial wrapping up for Croat generals

By MIKE CORDER (AP) – 20 hours ago

THE HAGUE, Netherlands — To fellow Croatians he's a war hero. For Serbs he's a 
criminal who lent tacit support to ethnic cleansing. Of one thing there's 
little doubt: Gen. Ante Gotovina has led a life on the edge.

He was a fighter in the French Foreign Legion and served on a French 
president's security detail. When he was indicted for war crimes, he led police 
on a worldwide four-year chase until his arrest in a Spanish resort — as he 
sipped a glass of fine wine.

Four days in 1995 define his life — a key battle of the Balkan wars that is the 
focus of a trial that wraps up next week and will determine whether he returns 
home to a hero's welcome or spends decades in prison.

Gotovina, 54, commanded troops in the lightning offensive to seize back the 
Croatia's Krajina region annexed by rebel Serbs, which Croats celebrate as 
Operation Storm.

For the last 2 1/2 years, Gotovina's once globe-trotting life has been reduced 
to nearly daily trips from a jail cell to a courtroom at the Yugoslav war 
crimes tribunal: He and two other Croat generals stand accused of unleashing a 
wave of murder and persecution of Serbs and the widespread looting and torching 
of their villages.

Prosecutors argue the four-day blitz was a textbook example of ethnic 
cleansing, while lawyers for the generals insist it was a legitimate military 
campaign that adhered to the laws of war.

The verdict, expected late this year, will be a milestone event in the Balkans.

For Croatians, acquittal would lend legal legitimacy to a campaign they already 
commemorate with a national holiday. For Serbs, conviction would be rare 
victory at a court many see as inherently biased against them.

The trial that started in March, 2008, wraps up next week with closing 
arguments. Prosecutors have demanded a 27-year sentence for Gotovina and prison 
terms of 23 years and 17 years respectively for his co-accused, Mladen Markac 
and Ivan Cermak.

The court heard several accounts of civilian slayings and abuse, including that 
of an elderly Serb woman forced to strip to her underwear and play basketball.

One witness described fleeing a building in the provincial capital, Knin, as 
shells fell around her and seeing dozens of new graves in a cemetery days 
later. Others told judges of the murder and mistreatment of Serb civilians by 
Croat forces. As Croat troops moved into the region after the shelling a wave 
of looting and abuse was unleashed that left dozens of Serbs dead and caused 
tens of thousands more to flee their homes.

Defense lawyers do not dispute that crimes were committed but say the generals 
were not responsible, instead blaming revenge attacks by Croats who themselves 
had been ethnically cleansed by Serbs.

In a written summary of their case, prosecutors acknowledged that Gotovina 
repeatedly issued orders for troops not to commit crimes and for perpetrators 
to be punished, but said he knew they would not be followed and did little to 
enforce them.

"His orders were aimed at pretending to address this crime wave, while allowing 
it to continue," they wrote.

Misetic said Gotovina's orders were genuine.

"The prosecution now essentially says that ... it was all fake or, I guess, for 
consumption by the international community," Misetic said. "This is basically 
where the trial chamber will have to make a decision — when he's issuing these 
internal orders to his troops are they intended to be followed or not intended 
to be followed?"

Gotovina left Croatia as a teenager and went to sea in the merchant marines 
before becoming a French legionnaire as a paratrooper in Africa. He wound up in 
France, working in the security detail of President Valery Giscard d'Estaing 
around the time he left office in 1981.

His lawyer, Luka Misetic, said his links to France's Gaullist movement likely 
led to him being framed by supporters of President Francois Mitterrand for an 
armed robbery and serving time in a French prison in the mid-1980s.

News reports say he trained paramilitaries in several Latin American countries, 
although Misetic denies it. Gotovina also spent much of his time in luxury 
resorts in the Spanish islands.

With his country on the brink of war, he went home in 1990, rising swiftly 
through the ranks and commanding its most sensitive districts.

On learning of his U.N. indictment, Gotovina traveled the world for more than 
four years to avoid arrest. When he was finally arrested in a restaurant in 
2005 on the Spanish island of Tenerife he had two false passports with stamps 
from countries across South America and Asia.

"It is straight out of some French spy novel, it's full of intrigue," Misetic 
said.

Operation Storm still stirs deep emotions. Earlier this month Croats celebrated 
the 15th anniversary of the liberation of the Krajina while Serbs in Belgrade 
and Bosnia mourned victims.

Serbian President Boris Tadic called the military counterpunch a "crime which 
shouldn't be forgotten." His Croatian counterpart Ivo Josipovic responded that 
it was "above all, the crown of the justified liberation war."

If Gotovina is acquitted, "there will be a huge euphoria here and everybody 
will forget the facts from his indictment," said Croatian political analyst 
Zarko Puhovski. Conviction "will be seen here as a politically motivated 
verdict — one meant to equalize guilt."

Despite Gotovina's colorful past, he now dedicates his time in jail to a more 
peaceful pursuit — painting portraits.

"As surprising as this may seem, he's an artist," said Misetic.

Associated Press Writer Snjezana Vukic in Zagreb contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. 

 

_______________________________________________
News mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.antic.org/mailman/listinfo/news

Reply via email to