News / Europe 
 Serbia's President: War Crimes Cooperation Not Question of Truth or Justice    
     
 Reuters April 03, 2015 4:57 PM BELGRADE— Serbia must cooperate with a U.N. war 
crimes court seeking the return of an ultra-nationalist defendant, not on the 
basis of truth or justice but because it's the law, the Balkan country's 
president said on Friday.The remarks by President Tomislav Nikolic underscored 
the disdain many Serbs feel for the Hague-based tribunal, which released 
firebrand politician Vojislav Seselj in November on grounds of ill-health only 
to demand his return this week.Nikolic was Seselj's right-hand man during the 
war years of Yugoslavia's collapse in the 1990s, when both men were disciples 
of a 'Greater Serbia' ideology.But both Nikolic and Prime Minister Aleksandar 
Vucic - another former Seselj ally - turned their backs on him in 2008 when 
they pushed instead for Serbia's Western integration.Seselj's return to Serbia, 
and his subsequent refusal to heed the tribunal's call for him to come back, 
has put them in an awkward spot, confronting them with the unpalatable prospect 
of having to extradite a man who was once their close friend."It's always tough 
when you have to cooperate exclusively because of the law, and not because of 
justice, God or the truth," Nikolic told local TV Chuprija late on Thursday, in 
comments carried by the state news agency Tanjug on Friday.The president also 
warned the media to keep its distance, echoing an often hostile tone used by 
officials in Serbia's conservative government towards its press critics."The 
media shouldn't be meddling in this, because they'll only make things worse. I 
know who's on which side. And I can tell you honestly, none of them is on the 
side of Seselj. They want to use any opportunity to bring down the government," 
he said.Serbian cooperation with the U.N. tribunal for the former Yugoslavia 
has long been a key condition of the country's closer integration with the 
European Union.The government is likely to face increasing Western pressure to 
arrest Seselj if he does not agree to return voluntarily.Serbia wants the EU to 
open the first so-called 'chapters' of accession talks this year.Seselj, who 
has cancer, has said police will have to carry him to the plane, though Vucic 
has appeared to rule out using force, saying Seselj would not be arrested in a 
"raid."Seselj handed himself into the tribunal in 2003, but was released in 
November on compassionate grounds before any verdict was reached in his 
long-running trial. This order was revoked on Monday because he had publicly 
said he would not return to the court once a verdict was reached.

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