abc.net.au 
<http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-09-26/ex-serbian-commander-jailed-over-murder-torture-war-crimes/8990960>
  


Ex-Serbian commander 'Captain Dragan' sentenced to 15 years over murder, 
torture war crimes


3-4 minutes

  _____  

Updated about 9 hours agoTue 26 Sep 2017, 10:58pm 

A Croatian court has sentenced a former Serbian paramilitary commander and 
Australian citizen to 15 years in prison for war crimes in the 1990s.


Key points:


*       Dragan Vasiljkovic was found guilty of two charges including torturing 
and beating prisoners
*       Holds dual Serbian-Australian citizenship after moving to Australia at 
age 15
*       Claims the trial was rigged and "an oppressive, fascist process"

The municipal court in the coastal town of Split found Dragan Vasiljkovic, also 
known as Captain Dragan and Daniel Snedden, guilty of the killings and torture 
of imprisoned Croatian civilians and troops while he was a rebel Serb commander 
during the 1991 to 1995 Croatian war.

Vasiljkovic, 62, was born in Serbia before moving to Australia at the age of 15.

He returned to the Balkans to train Serbian rebels in 1991, when they took up 
arms against Croatia's secession from Yugoslavia.

He was extradited from Australia in July 2015 
<http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-07-08/war-crimes-suspect-captain-dragan-extradited-from-australia/6605248>
 , after fighting a 10-year legal battle against being handed over to Croatia's 
judiciary.

Vasiljkovic, who holds dual Serbian-Australian citizenship, was living in Perth 
and worked as a golf instructor.

The three-judge Croatian court panel found Vasiljkovic guilty of two of the 
three charges, which included torturing and beating imprisoned Croatian police 
and army troops and commanding a special forces unit involved in the 
destruction of Croatian villages. 

He was found responsible for the death of at least two civilians.

About 60 prosecution witnesses were questioned during the trial, including 
those who said they were tortured by Vasiljkovic.

Vasiljkovic, who was widely believed during the war to be working for Serbia's 
secret service, has claimed innocence throughout the one-year trial, saying the 
whole process was rigged.

"This is an oppressive fascist process," Vasiljkovic said during his closing 
statements last week. "Not only did I not commit any crimes that I am charged 
with, I can only ask why I was brought here and charged in the first place."

The judges ruled that they will take into account the time Vasiljkovic served 
in detention in Australia and in a Croatian prison, meaning he has three and a 
half years of his sentence remaining. He has a right to appeal.

AP/ABC

Topics: history <http://www.abc.net.au/news/topic/history> , 
community-and-society <http://www.abc.net.au/news/topic/community-and-society> 
, unrest-conflict-and-war 
<http://www.abc.net.au/news/topic/unrest-conflict-and-war> , 
law-crime-and-justice <http://www.abc.net.au/news/topic/law-crime-and-justice> 
, croatia <http://www.abc.net.au/news/topic/croatia> , serbia 
<http://www.abc.net.au/news/topic/serbia> , yugoslavia 
<http://www.abc.net.au/news/topic/yugoslavia> , perth-6000 
<http://www.abc.net.au/news/topic/perth-6000> , australia 
<http://www.abc.net.au/news/topic/australia>  

First posted yesterday at 9:19amTue 26 Sep 2017, 9:19am 

 

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