The Borneo Post

Mladic unfit for genocide appeal — Lawyer

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THE HAGUE: Lawyers for Bosnian Serb military chief Ratko Mladic told a UN court on Tuesday that he was at risk of a “miscarriag­e of justice” because he was mentally unfit to take part in an appeal hearing against his genocide conviction.

Dubbed the “Butcher of Bosnia”, the 78-year-old Mladic has challenged his 2017 conviction and life sentence for genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes in the civil war in the former Yugoslavia, including the 1995 Srebrenica massacre.

But Mladic’s lawyers said they were taking part under protest as the two-day hearing got underway in The Hague, after judges earlier this week rejected a bid to postpone it pending a fresh medical assessment.

A frail-looking Mladic appeared in court wearing a mask because of coronaviru­s regulation­s, which he later removed. Wearing a suit with his red tie askew, he initially complained that he could not follow the hearing through headphones.

“This hearing today is inappropri­ate and threatens... a miscarriag­e of justice,” defence lawyer Dragan Ivetic told the court.

“I am unable to meaningful­ly gain instructio­n from Mr Mladic, or be assured that he is able to meaningful­ly follow proceeding­s.”

The hearing has already been delayed several times since March after Mladic needed an operation to remove a benign polyp on his colon, and then because of the pandemic.

Mladic was captured in 2011 after years on the run and sentenced to life behind bars three years ago for his role in the 1992-95 war in Bosnia.

This included genocide committed by his forces in the small eastern Bosnian town of Srebrenica, Europe’s worst bloodshed since World War II, where some 8,000 Muslim men and boys were slaughtere­d.

About 100,000 people were killed and 2.2 million others displaced in the Bosnian war, which erupted as communal rivalries tore Yugoslavia apart after the fall of communism.

Mladic, who has been serving his sentence at a detention centre in the seaside suburb of Schevening­en, has appealed against both the conviction and sentence. The prosecutio­n has appealed against his acquittal on wider genocide charges.

Ivetic said the original judgment was “replete with errors”, including linking Mladic to crimes committed in 1991 before he was in the chain of command.

The trial judges erred by admitting some actions allegedly carried out by Mladic’s subordinat­es, said Peta-Louise Baggott, another defence lawyer.

The case is being heard at the UN’s Internatio­nal Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals in The Hague, which deals with cases left over from now defunct tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda.

Mladic will himself be allowed to speak for 10 minutes on Wednesday. He had to be dragged out of the court in 2017 after an outburst in which he accused the judges of lying.

Mladic’s son Darko said the former military chief “hasn’t been able to prepare” because of his health and because lawyers had been unable to visit him.

“He doesn’t have the energy needed for work of this kind and there are questions about how well his memory is working,” Darko Mladic told AFP.

Mladic was the military face of a trio led on the political side by ex-Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic and former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic.

Haunting footage showed Mladic assuring people in Srebrenica they would be safe as his troops brushed aside Dutch UN peacekeepe­rs, even as those troops were gearing up for the massacre.

Milosevic died of a heart attack in his cell in The Hague in 2006 before his trial had finished, while Karadzic is serving a life sentence for genocide in Srebrenica and other atrocities. — AFP

He doesn’t have the energy needed for work of this kind and there are questions about how well his memory is working.

Darko Mladic

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 ?? — AFP file photos ?? Combinatio­n of photo shows Mladic (left) then Bosnian Serb General in Sarajevo in 1994, and; (right) at the ICTY in 2017 during his genocide trial.
— AFP file photos Combinatio­n of photo shows Mladic (left) then Bosnian Serb General in Sarajevo in 1994, and; (right) at the ICTY in 2017 during his genocide trial.

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