Friday July 13, 12:07 AM

Milosevic to ask Dutch court to challenge his arrest
 
 
 
AMSTERDAM, July 12 (AFP) - 

Former Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic, awaiting trial before a UN
tribunal in The Netherlands for Kosovo war crimes, will ask a Dutch
court to rule on whether his arrest in Yugoslavia was legal, a lawyer
advising him said Thursday.

Canadian lawyer Christopher Black said the action will be launched "to
contest the legality of Milosevic's arrest in Yugoslavia and the
legality of his detention in the UN war crimes tribunal detention unit
here in the Netherlands."

Milosevic has been charged with war crimes and crimes against humanity
in connection with the 1998-1999 Serbian crackdown on ethnic Albanians
in the southern Serbian province of Kosovo.

UN prosecutors have said they intend to also indict the former head of
state for war crimes committed in Bosnia and Croatia.

Black told a news conference in Amsterdam that the action on behalf of
Milosevic would be filed in a Dutch court in a few weeks.

According to Black's colleague, Andre Tremblay, Dutch law includes a
provision that allows a person to contest his detention if during the
arrest, the laws of the country where the arrest took place were not
respected.

Black, who heads up the legal arm of the International Committee for the
Defense of Slobodan Milosevic, called the former president's transfer to
The Hague from Yugoslavia on June 28 an "outright kidnapping".

Serbian authorities spirited Milosevic out of the country on a plane to
The Netherlands after failing to win backing for the extradition either
from the constitutional court or their Montenegrin allies in the federal
government, who are one-time allies of the old regime.

Black said the transfer was illegal because Serbian Prime Minister Zoran
Djindjic did not have the right to overrule the constitutional court in
Belgrade.

The former president was already jailed in Belgrade on corruption
charges under domestic law. The government used a legal loophole in the
Serbian constitution allowing the republic to override federal decisions
if it was in the country's interest.

Milosevic refused counsel for his hearings before the tribunal at his
initial appearance last week, charging that the court is illegal because
it was not appointed by the UN General Assembly. 

The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) was
created by the UN Security Council in 1993.

Black said he would ask for Milosevic's release because the tribunal was
created by the Security Council and not the assembly at large.

Tremblay called Milosevic a "political prisoner" and said the Serbian
nationalist had "no trust whatsoever in the tribunal", which he
described as the "legal branch of the oppressor", a veiled reference to
the United States.

He said Milosevic had asked Black to act as his agent and instruct the
Dutch lawyers launching the legal action. He would not name the Dutch
legal team "for security reasons". 

The team will fight the legality of the arrest before the Dutch court,
the European Comission and the UN General Assembly, Tremblay said.

Black held a two-hour meeting with Milosevic on Monday.

"He's quite relaxed and has a clean conscience," the lawyer said. "He is
never going to plead guilty to something he didn't do and will fight to
his last breath to prove he is innocent."

The Canadian lawyers said their statements "reflect the words and
sentiment of Milosevic" as he expressed them during the meeting in the
ICTY detention centre.

Black would not say if the former Yugoslav president would continue to
represent himself before the ICTY. He added that he was not being paid
for his work for Milosevic at the moment and was hoping for financial
support from "the Serb diaspora" and from within Yugoslavia.


Miroslav Antic,
http://www.antic.org/ 

                                       Serbian News Network - SNN
                                           [EMAIL PROTECTED]
                                        http://www.antic.org/

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