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Institute for War & Peace Reporting

Tribunal Update (TU)

REGIONAL REPORT: Plavsic Denounced as Traitor

Former Bosnian Serb president's guilty plea is unlikely to encourage her
people to face up to their leaders' wartime record.

By Daniela Valenta in Sarajevo (TU 293, 9-14 December 2002)

Biljana Plavsic's decision to admit to war crimes charges has been
denounced in the Bosnian Serb entity as an act of treachery.

The former Bosnian Serb president, attending a sentencing hearing this
week, agreed to change her plea two months ago. She not only admitted
count three of her indictment, persecution, but acknowledged the
legitimacy of the court and made an apology to all those her policies
had harmed.

Although Plavsic has since said that she won't testify in any other
trial, her statements have already put some of the blame for the horrors
of Bosnia on the shoulders of former Serbian president Slobodan
Milosevic, currently on trial for genocide.

Sadik Pazarac of the Helsinki Committee for Human Rights said Plavsic's
admission of guilt is unlikely to encourage Bosnian Serbs to start
dealing with the criminal past of their leaders, as they have already
labelled her a traitor.

"A majority [in Republika Srpska, RS] condemned her admission of guilt,"
Pazarac said. "Politicians and military officers who took part in the
war are afraid that she might name them or testify against them. It is
not likely that anyone will [follow her example and] admit their
responsibility for war crimes."

Pazarac said the mood in the Bosnian Serb entity reflects the policy of
the government, which has failed to cooperate with The Hague tribunal.

The non-Serb public in Bosnia might also end up unhappy with the
resolution of Plavsic case, said Jakob Finci, head of an association
that coordinates efforts to establish a Bosnian Truth and Reconciliation
commission.

Finci said Plavsic's change of plea might have left people in the
Federation wondering if she was doing it out of a genuine feeling of
remorse, or only as an attempt to reduce her sentence.

"There have been no promises from the prosecutor, or any agreement with
Biljana Plavsic," said Refik Hodzic of the tribunal's outreach
programme. "She knows she may still face life imprisonment.

"It is necessary for this society to start dealing with its past," he
said. "The tribunal establishes concrete facts from indictments, which
should help, but eventually it is up to the society, politicians and the
media."

Plavsic gave an interview last week to the Belgrade political newspaper
Politika in which she said she had made no deals about giving evidence
to prosecutors in other trials in exchange for having most of her own
charges dropped.

"I have made no deal about the length of my sentence," she said. "My
only condition was not to testify at other trials. I would not have
anything to say at the trial of Slobodan Milosevic."

Daniela Valenta is a Sarajevo-based journalist


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