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The Milosevic Trial: journalists warned to stop criticisms
By Paul Mitchell
14 October 2002
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Prosecution lawyers in the trial of former Yugoslav President
Slobodan Milosevic have warned journalists to stop criticising
their performance and evidence. Milosevic is appearing before
the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia
(ICTY) in The Hague accused of war crimes.
Opening the second phase of the trialcovering the wars
in Croatia and BosniaProsecutor Geoffrey Nice complained,
These proceedings are in public in order that the public
can see our work is done properly ... Theyre not here to
provide copy or particularly good copy for newspapers or matters
of that sort.
There is no doubt that Milosevics utilisation of Serbian
nationalism to shore up his position within Yugoslavia played
a significant role in enflaming ethnic tensions and encouraging
crimes against Kosovan Albanians. But that does not change the
fact that The Hague trial is a politically motivated kangaroo
court. Its claim that Milosevic was solely responsible for events
in Yugoslavia is aimed at covering over the role of the Western
powers in fanning the flames of civil war in order to divide the
country into a series of impotent ethnically-based statesentirely
dependent on imperialist favour.
The prosecutions efforts to this end, however, have produced
a less than convincing case against Milosevica fact that
is causing consternation is some circles. Whilst the media has
been largely supportive of Milosevic being found guilty there
has been criticism that the prosecution has failed to provide
conclusive evidence of his guilt that justifies their own uncritical
support for the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia.
The Institute of War and Peace Reporting laments the
unfavourable media reports of the prosecutions performance
during the Kosovo phase of the trial, when it was criticised for
not producing a smoking gun or key insiders
that could provide cast-iron proof that Milosevic masterminded
ethnic cleansing.
Typical of these unfavourable media reports is one by John
Laughland in the British conservative Daily Mail last month.
In his article entitled, If this man is a war criminal where
is all the evidence? Laughland ridiculed the prosecution
for presenting two Serbian key insidersRadomir
Tanic and Radomir Markovicas witnesses. Tanic claimed in
court he actually heard Milosevic give the order for ethnic cleansing
but later admitted it was only his interpretation. Laughland says
Tanic was shown to be an agent of the secret services of
various Western countries and to be so unfamiliar with the corridors
of power that he could not even say on which floor of the presidential
palace Milosevics office had been.
When MarkovicMilosevics spy chiefappeared
before The Hague he told the court that he had been forced under
duress to give a statement incriminating Milosevic. Laughland
complained that contrary to the prosecutions intentions,
Markovic had said Milosevic had never ordered the expulsion
of the Albanian population of Kosovo, that the former president
had repeatedly issued instructions to the police and the army
to respect the laws of war, and to protect the civilian population
even if it meant compromising the battle against Albanian terrorists.
After eight months and 124 witnesses the prosecution has completed
its evidence for the indictment covering war crimes in Kosovo
in 1998/99. This was supposed to constitute the entire substance
of the original case against Milosevic. Bosnia and Croatia were
only added because of concerns that the evidence of direct responsibility
for war crimes in Kosovo was not strong enough. The Kosovo indictment
was drawn up at the height of the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia when
politicians talkedand the media duly reportedof hundreds
of thousands of unarmed civilians being murdered by Serb
forces. In the end, the indictment covers the deaths of
340 civilians at 10 alleged massacre sites.
But the case has proved to be fairly disastrous. Two thirds
of the witnesses have been Kosovan farmers and villagers who claimed
to have seen the massacres. There has been a handful of low-ranking
Yugoslav Army or police officers who alleged they saw or took
part in atrocities. Other witnesses include former Kosovo Liberation
Army soldiers, diplomats and politicians involved in the Organisation
for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) and researchers
for the Office of the Prosecution (OTP).
The difficulty the prosecution has had in linking Milosevic
directly to war crimes was shown by General Peter de la Billiere.
Involved in counter-terrorist activities for 41 years and commander
of the British Army in the Falklands and Gulf Wars, de la Billiere
told the court he had been impressed by the Yugoslav Armys
rulebook and its attention to humanitarian issues.
He then revealed he had never visited Yugoslavia or been involved
in the war there and that the indictment itself was the
sole document on which I have made a judgement as to what happened
on the ground. If the indictment was true, he continued,
there must have been massive logistic and manpower organisation
to carry out the genocide. However, it emerged there were no
documents produced or seen indicating a concerted campaign.
He continued, We do not have any written directions suggesting
what these instructions were and indeed nor are there ... nor
is there any record of war diaries or situation reports. So one
can only make the assumption that the instructions were given
verbally.
Faced with the lack of a single written order Nice told the
court, criminals or politicians who do acts that are or
are subsequently revealed as being criminal, dont leave
traces behind them. They dont leave paper trails. Thats
why, of course, this accused operated in that curiously empty
office, dealing with people on a one-to-one basis.
It is precisely the inability of the prosecution to present
witnesses who dealt with Milosevic on a one-to-one basis that
has provoked the criticism. In an attempt to dig itself out of
this hole, the prosecution recently called Zoran Stijovic, who
had transcribed Markovics statement. But he only made matters
worse for the prosecution. Stijovic told the tribunal, I
didnt come here of my own free will and it was my fault
that [Markovics] statement was placed before the Tribunal
here. He was surprised the prosecution had used the statement
since it was just an information gathering exercise for another
court case and had no legal status in Serbia. Stijovic added that
there was no lawyer present during Markovics interview and
he had not been cautioned about incriminating himself.
Previous US and European support for Milosevic
The second problem confronting the prosecution will be to explain
why Milosevic is now being charged with war crimes in Bosnia and
Croatia when it is common knowledge that the US and European powers
maintained diplomatic ties with his regime and he was viewed by
Washington in particular as the main guarantor of the 1996 Dayton
Accords that ended the Bosnian civil war.
Nice tried to dismiss such questions at the end of his address
to the court. He argued, disingenuously, Your Honours, this
Tribunal is, of course, not political. It doesnt need to
concern itself with or to explain how it was that the accused
was left to recover after Dayton ... as an apparently respectable
member of the community.
Nices statement is a diplomatic sideswipe at the US government,
to which the court has tried to attribute sole responsibility
for promoting Milosevic as the guarantor of peace
in the Balkans after Dayton and making him an apparently
respectable member of the community.
The prosecution has also criticised the US governments
attitude to the Milosevic trial. The first part of the trial was
notable for the absence of the key US personnel involved in the
Kosovo War. US envoy Richard Holbrooke was the main negotiator
with Milosevic between October 1998 and March 1999. Christopher
Hill mediated talks between Kosovan Albanians and Milosevic in
1998 and at the Rambouillet talks before NATO started bombing.
General Wesley Clark was commander of NATO during the bombing
campaign. To date, the US government has refused to allow them
to appear for fear of compromising security and intelligence operations
and setting a precedent that could lead to the conviction of US
officials. The only American citizen to appear at The Hague has
been William Walker who was provided by the OSCE in
his capacity as head of its Kosovo Verification Mission (KVM).
Nice has previously expressed his frustration at negotiations
with an unnamed powerbelieved to be the USover Rule
70 witnesses, which is the ICTYs ruling specifically
designed to limit or prevent disclosure of state secrets. He said
he could not accept the conditions imposed by this unnamed government,
which thinks it can simply set its terms.
The refusal of the Bush administration to subject US personnel
to international tribunals undermines the humanitarian pretext
for the NATO intervention in the Balkans and threatens the authority
of the European powers and the ICTYparticularly if they
fail to convict Milosevic.
The British government in particular has invested a lot of
time and effort in the Milosevic trial. Nice is British as is
presiding Judge Richard May, a former Labour Party parliamentary
candidate who stood against Margaret Thatcher, and nearly all
the army and intelligence officers who have appeared before the
court. British Special Forces have been in the forefront of arresting
suspected war criminals and MI5 and MI6 have been behind a lot
of the ICTYs investigations.
The tensions between the US and European powers have surfaced
on many occasions during the trial. Many European officials and
politicians have referred to US officials in diplomatic terms
such as Milosevics collocutorsa term meaning
those involved in discussions but implying collaboration.
One of many such occasions was provided by Knut Vollebaek, former
chairman of the OSCE and head of the UN mission in Kosovo. He
told the tribunal that the Norwegian government saw the resolution
of the Balkans conflict as a means to build on the international
prestige it had gained with the Oslo Israeli-Palestinian Accords.
He praised the leading role of the OSCE mandated by UN resolutions
and referred to the Milosevic-Holbrooke agreement negotiated by
the US in 1998 to implement a ceasefire between the KLA and Yugoslav
Army and police as simply an added agreement.
Vollebaek then criticised US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright
over her threat to withdraw Walker and the KVM. She had made the
threat after the Yugoslav government pronounced Walker persona
non grata for calling the shootings at Racak a massacre
of innocent civilians, when they insisted the bodies were
of KLA fighters gathered together to create the false impression
of a massacre. Walkers statement famously provided a pretext
for NATO intervention, but Vollebaek called it an emotional
response to Racak and said that Albright had no right
to give such a statement. I suppose this was her personal opinion
or assessment. He also criticised Albright who imposed the
KLA as the leading faction in the Kosovar Albanian delegation
at Rambouillet, for insisting that the international presence
in Kosovo he had been trying to negotiate had to be NATO-led.
Criticism of Walker was also made by General Joseph Maisonneuve,
Assistant Deputy Chief of Canadian Army Defence staff and an OSCE
inspector, who told the tribunal that it had led to the Yugoslav
Army breaking off its professional and very productive discussions.
He added, I cant answer why Walker made this assessment,
as he knew there had been a big battle between the Yugoslav Army
and the KLA whose members were amongst the dead.
See Also:
The Milosevic Trial: Key prosecution
witness backs deposed Yugoslav president
Officials used threats to extract testimony, ex-spy chief says
[11 September 2002]
Behind the Milosevic
trial: the US, Europe and the Balkan catastrophe
[4 July 2001]
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