Chattanooga Times Free Press

Croat war criminal’s shocking suicide stuns U.N. tribunal

- BY MIKE CORDER

THE HAGUE, Netherland­s — Seconds after a U.N. judge confirmed his 20-year war crimes sentence Wednesday, former Bosnian Croat military commander Slobodan Praljak shouted, “I am not a war criminal!” threw back his head, drank liquid from a small bottle and told the court he had taken poison. A flustered judge halted the hearing and Praljak was rushed to a nearby hospital, where he died.

Shocking images of the 72-year-old former philosophy professor and theater director who became a wartime general shouting and drinking what he said was poison were streamed live on the court’s website and around the Balkans.

The death cast a pall over the last case at the groundbrea­king Internatio­nal Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. Judges upheld sentences ranging from 10-25 years against Praljak and five other Bosnian Croat wartime political and military leaders for their part in a plan linked to Croatia’s late former President Franjo Tudjman to violently carve out a Croat-dominated mini-state in Bosnia during the Balkan wars by killing, mistreatin­g and deporting Muslims.

Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic offered his condolence­s to Praljak’s family and said the former general’s actions reflected the “deep moral injustice” done to him and the five others whose sentences were also upheld by the appeals judges Wednesday.

In their ruling, the judges confirmed Praljak was guilty of crimes including murder, persecutio­n and inhumane treatment as part of the plot to establish a Croat entity in Bosnia in the early 1990s, as well as the 20-year sentence initially handed to Praljak in May 2013 at the end of the six men’s trial.

Ironically, Praljak, who surrendere­d to the tribunal in April 2004 and had already been jailed for 13 years, could have soon walked free because those who are convicted are generally released after serving two-thirds of their sentences.

After Praljak’s outburst, Dutch police immediatel­y were called in to launch an independen­t investigat­ion.

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