Associated Press
February 26, 2007

COURT: SERBIA FAILED TO PREVENT GENOCIDE

The Hague, Netherlands (AP) - The United Nations' highest court ruled Monday
that Serbia failed to use its influence with Bosnian Serbs to prevent the
genocide of Bosnian Muslims at Srebrenica, but exonerated Serbia of direct
responsibility for genocide or complicity in genocide during the 1992-95
war.

In a lengthy ruling, the International Court of Justice said the leaders of
Serbia also failed to comply with its international obligation to punish
those who carried out the massacre in July 1995.

The Serbians "should have made the best effort within their power to try and
prevent the tragic events then taking shape," in the U.N. enclave, the scale
of which "might have been surmised."

Reading the decision, Judge Rosalyn Higgins said it was clear in Belgrade
there was a serious risk of a massive slaughter in Srebrenica, when some
7,000 Bosnian Muslims were killed.

But Serbia "has not shown that it took any initiative to prevent what
happened or any action on its part to avert the atrocities which were being
committed."

Serbia's claim that it was powerless to prevent the massacres "hardly
tallies with their known influence" over the Bosnian Serb army, said the
ruling by the court, also known as the World Court.

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