BALKAN WITNESS
Articles on the Kosovo Conflict
The War-Crimes Trial of Slobodan Milosevic
The Hague, 2002 - 2006
and other ex-Yugoslavia war-crimes trialsLive audio and video coverage of the war-crimes trials
Milosevic Trial Public Archive
is a project of SENSE News Agency based at the International War Crimes Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in The Hague. The focus of this project is regular, balanced and comprehensive coverage of the work of the ICTY, and the activities of ICJ (International Court of Justice) and ICC (International Criminal Court).
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Croatia: Crimes Against Humanity and War Crimes, October 8, 2001. Bosnia: Genocide, Crimes Against Humanity, and War Crimes, November 22, 2001 |
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In this section we will include articles of particular interest as they come to our attention.
Note: Each article shown below represents the opinion of the author, and not necessarily of anyone else.
Western Promises Discussion of the book Peace and Punishment: The Secret Wars of Politics and International Justice by Florence Hartmann, formerly spokesperson for the ICTY chief prosecutor. Reviews the role of Western governments in undermining the work of the Tribunal. Discusses role of Milosevic as the mastermind of the Srebrenica massacre, and argues that Western officials knew this when they were negotiating with him. The book reports that Serbian documents provided strong evidence of Belgrade's control over Serbian political and military forces in Croatia and Bosnia, including the previously unknown existence of two entities within the joint chiefs of staff in Belgrade in charge of coordinating funding and personnel for the Serbian armies in those two countries By Marc Perelman, The Nation, January 7, 2008
Two
cases at the Hague tribunal, concerning Kosovo and Srebrenica,
will show the details of the guilt of the indicted Serbian authorities. IWPR,
July 14, 2006
Kosovo Trial
Srebrenica Trial
Genocide,
War Crimes and Crimes Against Humanity
A Topical Digest of the Case Law of the
International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
This 861-page book organizes the decisions of the International Criminal
Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia by topic, including genocide, crimes
against humanity, war crimes, individual criminal responsibility, command
responsibility, affirmative defenses, jurisdiction, sentencing, fair trial
rights, guilty pleas and appellate review.
Download full text of the book (pdf file, 2.7 Mb). July 2006
"Patient: S. Milosevic." Reporter, a Dutch television-program, has published the entire medical file of Slobodan Milosevic on its website. The site contains internal memos from the ICTY, correspondence between his attending physicians, brain scans, hearing tests, lab results, medicine charts, and the medical examiners' report. Milosevic and his son wanted his medical file to be made public. June 2006
The Death of Slobodan Milosevic Some observations.
Who Gave the Order? - Scorpion Trial 2 By Jasmina Tesanovic, January
26, 2006
Eyewitness account from Belgrade courtroom by one of the Women in
Black.
Book
Review: Judgement Day: The Trial of Slobodan Milosevic by
Chris Stephen, December 2005
The author sheds light on how dealing with its most infamous
defendant inadvertently helped shape policymaking with regard to the creation of
the International Criminal Court, ICC, the world’s first permanent war crimes
tribunal. Once the court’s greatest supporter, America is now its
fiercest critic. The US government is currently in the forefront of efforts to
prevent war crimes justice becoming a permanent feature on the world map, in
opposition to the European Union and its support for the new International
Criminal Court.
The Capitulation of the Hague Tribunal By Marko
Attila Hoare,
June 2005
The recent announcement that the International Criminal Tribunal
for the former Yugoslavia will not be issuing any more indictments against
war-crimes suspects amounts to the Tribunal’s capitulation: with the sole
exception of Milosevic himself, the men most responsible for the bloodshed in
the former Yugoslavia have escaped justice.
Milosevic Wire Tap Revelations
IWPR, February 6, 2004
Telephone intercepts appear to expose Milosevic role in
Croatian and Bosnian conflicts.
See also:
Intercepts of
telephone calls between (former) Yugoslav officials
Audio and transcripts of intercepted conversations between various Serb
plotters and murderers. The conversations have been added to the evidence at the Milosevic trial.
Transcripts are in English and Bosnian-Croatian-Serbian. 1991-1992
The Fog of
Justice
By Tim Judah, New
York Review of Books, January 15, 2004 (PDF)
How the Milosevic
trial is affecting the former Yugoslavia. For a comment on Judah's article,
click here.
Helena Ranta's Testimony at The Hague - Transcript
March 12, 2003 (Word document)\
Expert Testifies Racak Not Staged Coalition for
International Justice, March 12, 2003
Dr. Helena Ranta's
testimony summarized. She reiterated that
"There were no indications of [the Racak massacre victims] being other
than unarmed civilians."
Serbs, Not NATO
Strike, Killed Inmates, Hague Court Hears By Marlise Simons, The New York Times, August 28, 2002.
In May 1999 NATO air strikes killed 19 Albanians in a
Serbian prison. The next day Serbian authorities killed over 100 more and tried to lay the blame on NATO.
The
Case of the Missing Witnesses,
by Mirko
Klarin, IWPR, June 11, 2002.
Key US officials
involved in the international bid to solve the Kosovo crisis are absent from
the witness list in the Milosevic trial.
The
Star of The Hague,
by Tim Judah, New
York Review of Books, April 25, 2002.
Report on the trial from Belgrade and
The Hague.
Kosovo Victims Gagged,
by Mirko Klarin, IWPR, April 22, 2002.
Statements of Kosovar witnesses to Serbian war crimes are
allowed to be filed on paper, but the world does not hear their stories.
An Audience with Milosevic,
by Mirna Jancic, IWPR, April 6, 2002.
Milosevic may mock his
victims from the Hague tribunal, but it's their best hope of getting justice. As
one journalist remarked, "Imagine if Osama Bin Laden was allowed to
cross-examine the survivors of the World Trade Centre." Yet I left for London
convinced that the Balkans' only hope of establishing some accountability and at
least some of the truth about the region's recent wars lies right there, in The
Hague.
U.S. calls for phase-out of Hague tribunals,
news reports, February 28, 2002.
European allies disagree.
The Normalcy of War Criminals,
by Slavenka Drakulic,
Mother Jones, February 27,
2002.
As the trial of Slobodan Milosevic continues, a Croatian
novelist considers how disturbingly mundane war criminals are.
Milosevic Challenged by Racak Survivors,
by Gordana Igric, IWPR, February 18, 2002
Slobodan Milosevic accuses the West of fabricating a massacre
at Racak as a pretext for NATO intervention. One reporter at the scene recalls
the survivors' testimony.
It's sick to ignore our part in the making of Milosevic
, by Hugo Young, The Guardian, February 14, 2002.
Milosevic
Planned Kosovo Deportation,
by Anthony Borden, IWPR, February 13,
2002.
Prosecution says Milosevic was "controlling force" behind a
"concerted effort" to expel Albanians from Kosovo.