The Borneo Post

United Nations judges hear bid to overturn radical Serb’s acquittal

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THE HAGUE: UN prosecutor­s yesterday seek to overturn the surprise acquittal of Serbia’s Vojislav Seselj, with the firebrand politician set to snub the court, dubbed this week ‘a theatre of the absurd.’

The appeal hearing in the Seselj case comes after several blows for the Internatio­nal Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia ( ICTY) and its hopes for justice for the victims.

Those setbacks included the dramatic live suicide of former Bosnian Croat military commander Slobodan Praljak.

In late November, he swallowed cyanide in the courtroom in scenes beamed around the world just after judges upheld his 20-year jail term for war crimes – their last sentence before the ICTY closes this month.

The building, which houses the tribunal’s successor, the Mechanism for Internatio­nal Criminal Tribunals ( MICT), is now part of a crime scene for Dutch investigat­ors.

Just a week earlier, Bosnian Serb military commander Ratko Mladic had to be dragged from the court during an angry outburst as he was jailed for life for genocide, among other charges.

Set up in 1993, the ICTY has successful­ly prosecuted dozens of those responsibl­e for the worst atrocities in Europe since World War II. But hopes of bringing reconcilia­tion to the bitterly divided region are far from having materialis­ed.

In a fresh sign of the bitter tensions, about 2,000 people packed a public memorial in Zagreb on Monday to honour Praljak hailing him as a hero.

“No one can compare to a great man like Slobodan,” said Miroslav Tudjman, an MP of Croatia’s conservati­ve HDZ party and son of late Croatian nationalis­t Franjo Tudjman.

He slammed the UN judges as ‘incompeten­t and irresponsi­ble’ and said the court is ‘a parody, a theatre of the absurd’.

Seselj has done nothing to hide his own contempt for the tribunal.

“I have nothing to do with the court in The Hague,” he told AFP in Belgrade, adding he had spent 12 years in the city “waiting for the court to prove the charges against me”.

“Since I was acquitted in the first instance, I do not see what is left for this mechanism, what it can do with my verdict,” added Seselj, now a member of the Serbian parliament with his Serbian Radical Party.

He plans to be absent when from 1200 GMT judges at the MICT hear oral arguments by prosecutor­s, who insist Seselj was behind the murders of many Croats, Muslims and other non- Serb civilians in an unrelentin­g quest to create a ‘Greater Serbia’. — AFP

 ??  ?? Croatian students gather under the rain in downtown Zagreb to voice their support of Bosnian Croats and protest the recent verdict by a UN war crimes court against six Bosnian Croat wartime political and military leaders. — AFP photo
Croatian students gather under the rain in downtown Zagreb to voice their support of Bosnian Croats and protest the recent verdict by a UN war crimes court against six Bosnian Croat wartime political and military leaders. — AFP photo

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