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http://www.eKathimerini.com/4dcgi/_w_articles_world_1516620_04/04/2002_1
5009

Kathimerini, Greece, April 5, 2002

S/E Europe

Money, not morals, drives the Serbian war crimes  debate

Country is extraditing suspects in hope of foreign economic and
political aid


                                            By Fredrik Dahl - Reuters

                                            BELGRADE - Serbia's need of
economic aid and the
                                            prospect of renewed
international isolation are again
                                            pushing it to surrender war
crimes suspects, not a newfound
                  willingness to confront the truth about past
atrocities.

                  In a now familiar scenario, the reformers who ousted
Serb strongman Slobodan Milosevic after a
                  bloodstained decade in power face a stark choice
between assisting the UN war crimes tribunal or losing
                  crucial Western financial support.

                  Due to disagreements among leading politicians, Serbia
missed a US deadline last Sunday to
                  demonstrate cooperation with the tribunal and found
aid from Washington worth about $40 million
                  frozen.

                  Officials have, however, signaled people accused by
the court in The Hague will soon be handed over,
                  stressing Belgrade's need for money rather than the
need for justice.

                  "Without pressure, nothing would happen. They would
never do it willingly," said Sonja Biserko at the
                  Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Serbia, a
non-governmental organization.

                  "Cooperation with The Hague is presented as a
necessary evil." Threatened with a similar ultimatum in
                  March last year, the authorities arrested Milosevic
just ahead of Washington's deadline. Three months
                  later, he was shipped to the tribunal, a day before a
donors' conference which yielded $1.3 billion.

                  Appearing to act only when its arm is twisted, the
country has yet to launch the soul-searching about its
                  role in the Balkan wars of the 1990s which human
rights activists and others say is needed for true
                  reconciliation.

                  "It is very regrettable that Serbia seems to cooperate
only because of economic factors and pressure
                  from the international community," said Matias
Hellman, a Belgrade-based official of the UN tribunal.

                  "In this society, there is not much discussion about
the alleged war crimes that were committed," he
                  said.

                  Handing over fellow Serbs indicted by the tribunal is
a politically explosive issue which has deepened
                  divisions among Serbia's pro-democracy leaders who
united to topple Milosevic in a mass uprising in
                  October 2000.

                  Their heated row has focused on avoiding the kind of
damaging Western sanctions Yugoslavia suffered
                  under Milosevic and not on the need to examine
killings and other crimes by Serb forces during the
                  break-up of old socialist Yugoslavia.

                  "When they talk about The Hague, our politicians never
mention justice, the need for national moral
                  catharsis, the necessity to give satisfaction to the
victims' families," said well-known Serb analyst Aleksa
                  Djilas.

                  "There is only talk about loans, that America is
strong and that we should listen to them," he told daily
                  Vecernje Novosti.

                  Natasa Kandic, a human rights activist who heads the
Humanitarian Law Center in the Serb capital,
                  stressed the need to accept responsibility for war
crimes in order to create a future society based on the
                  rule of law.

                  "Without recognizing the pain of other victims, the
process of reconciliation with others is impossible,"
                  she said.

                  But, Kandic added, everybody who tries to speak in
public about Serb war crimes is branded a traitor.

                  Many Serbs regard the UN court as biased against them,
a view that appears to have gained ground as
                  a result of Milosevic's vigorous and defiant defense
at his trial in the Hague court, which got under way
                  in February.

                  Yugoslav President Vojislav Kostunica struck a
nationalist chord when suggesting at the weekend that
                  national dignity was more important than an "uncertain
dollar amount."

                  Kostunica, a self-professed moderate nationalist, says
he favors cooperation even if the tribunal makes
                  his "stomach turn" but insists a domestic law is
needed to regulate it.

                  This prompted his archrival, Serbian Prime Minister
Zoran Djindjic, seen as a pragmatist pushing for
                  Western-style economic reform, to accuse the president
of cowardice and expecting others to do dirty
                  work for him.

                  Milosevic was the last Yugoslav citizen to be
transferred to the tribunal from Belgrade.

                  If Serbian leaders find a way to hand over more
suspects, three Milosevic-era officials accused with the
                  former president of war crimes in the Yugoslav
province of Kosovo in 1999 are widely seen as the most
                  likely candidates.

                  That would leave other suspects, including wartime
Bosnian-Serb leader Radovan Karadzic and
                  military chief Ratko Mladic, still at large in
Yugoslavia or in Bosnia's Serb republic - raising the
                  prospect of new Western ultimatums and deadlines.

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