Muscat Daily

Private funeral for Bosnian-Croat war criminal

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Zagreb, Croatia- Bosnian Croat war criminal Slobodan Praljak, who swallowed poison before UN judges in The Hague last week, had a private funeral in Zagreb, a Croatian newspaper reported on Saturday.

Moments after the UN tribunal for the former Yugoslavia upheld his 20-year jail sentence on November 29, Praljak took his own life in dramatic scenes that were broadcast live from the courtroom.

He died in a hospital several hours later and the preliminar­y results showed he swallowed potassium cyanide and died from heart failure.

The funeral ceremony for Praljak was held on Thursday at Zagreb's main Mirogoj crematoriu­m in the presence of close family and a few close friends, ‘those he listed in the farewell letter’, influentia­l Vecernji List daily reported Saturday, quoting anonymous sources.

The informatio­n could not be independen­tly confirmed and the funeral was not announced like others at the cemetery's website.

In a sealed letter handed over to his family a few years ago, to be opened when he dies, Praljak said he wanted his funeral be a private one, his lawyer Nika Pinter told AFP last week.

On Monday the Croatian gen- erals' associatio­n will hold a commemorat­ion for Praljak and a mass will be held at a Zagreb church the same day.

The 72 year old Bosnian Croat commander, who worked in film and theatre before joining the military, remains a hero to many Croats despite his conviction for war crimes and crimes against humanity during Bosnia’s 1990s conflict. The judges confirmed that Praljak and his five Bosnian Croat co-defendants were part of a ‘joint criminal enterprise’ to ethnically cleanse Bosnian Muslims in the war.

Their conviction­s were upheld for crimes including murder, persecutio­n and inhumane treatment. Since Praljak's death, Croats have paid multiple tributes to the late general, laying flowers and lighting candles in town squares in Croatia and Bosnia.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Lit candles and flags are placed in tribute to Gen Slobodan Praljak in Zagreb on November 30 after the Bosnian Croat war criminal took his own life in front of United Nations war crimes judges
(AFP) Lit candles and flags are placed in tribute to Gen Slobodan Praljak in Zagreb on November 30 after the Bosnian Croat war criminal took his own life in front of United Nations war crimes judges

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