|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: The
Balkans
The Milosevic Trial: Key prosecution witness backs deposed
Yugoslav president
Officials used threats to extract testimony, ex-spy chief
says
By Keith Lee and Paul Mitchell
11 September 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Late July Radomir Markovic, a former Serbian spy chief, claimed
he had been forced to appear as a prosecution witness in the trial
of former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic. And, in a dramatic
reversal for the prosecution, Markovic denied that Milosevic ethnically
cleansed the ethnic Albanians in Kosova and then tried to cover
up the evidence.
Milosevic is on trial at the International Criminal Tribunal
for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) at The Hague for crimes against
humanity. He faces five counts of war crimes in Kosova and has
been indicted on another 61 counts of war crimes including genocide
in Croatia and Bosnia.
The WSWSs opposition to the judicial travesty that constitutes
the ICTY does not imply any political support for Milosevic and
his Serbian nationalist policies. Nor does it imply complete exoneration
of Milosevic for crimes that were committed against Kosova
Albanians in the period leading up to the NATO attack on Yugoslavia
in 1999.
But whether one accepts entirely Markovics testimony
about Milosevics role in Kosovan events, his account of
how Serbian officials attempted to coerce testimony from him damaging
to the deposed president further exposes the ICTY as a politically
motivated operation carried out at the behest of the Western powers
in order to whitewash their brutal imperialist assault on Yugoslavia.
The fact is that the prosecution has not been able to produce
any evidence that Milosevic was directly responsible for war crimes.
Markovic was Head of State Security at the Interior Ministry
from 1998 to 2000 the period covering a marked escalation
of the civil war in Kosova, the bombing of Yugoslavia by NATO
and the establishment of a United Nations protectorate.
His claim to the court that Serbian and ICTY officials had
coerced him and/or misinterpreted his evidence about events during
this period came as a complete surprise to the prosecution. They
believed the appearance of Markovicbilled as a direct subordinate
of Milosevic and a key member of his inner circlewould be
a vital trump card in their case against the former Yugoslav leader,
enabling them finally to link the former president with specific
atrocities in Bosnia, Croatia and Kosova.
Markovics own journey to The Hague underscores the dubious
and cynical nature of the trial itself. The ex-spy does not face
any charges of war crimes himself but has been held in a Serbian
prison for 17 months on charges of murdering four of Milosevics
political opponents.
During his evidence to The Hague, Markovic was first questioned
by the prosecution lawyer Geoffrey Nice on a statement he had
previously made to the ICTY. Nice tried to prove that Milosevic
was head of a chain of command, and had subordinated
the police to military control and enrolled paramilitaries. Nice
also asserted that once Milosevic became aware that NATO would
win the war against Yugoslavia, he ordered murdered Kosovars to
be exhumed and reburied (known as the mopping-up order)
so that evidence could not be used by the ICTY. This had occurred
with the case of the refrigerated truck full of decomposing bodies
found submerged in the river Danube.
But during his cross-examination by Milosevic, Markovic recounted
how he had been arrested in February 2001 by Serbian police and
held in custody ever since. Markovic said that in prison he had
been visited by two committees of the FRY (Federal Republic
of Yugoslavia) Assembly. On one such visit Serbian Minister
of the Interior Dusan Mihajlovic and head of police Goran Petrovic
had arrived with a group of secret police, removed him from the
jaila direct infringement of Serbian lawand taken
him to a private dinner. There they offered him a new identity
and a new life if he testified against his old boss.
Markovic told the court, They spoke to me about the difficult
position I was in. They warned me against the possible consequences
and offered me an option in the form of accusing Milosevic as
the person who issued orders for those criminal offences, which
would relieve me of liability before a criminal court.
At this point Milosevic pointed out those extracting statements
from detainees are guilty under the 1988 United Nations Treaty
against Torture. Presiding Judge Richard May immediately stopped
any further questioning along these lines, stating, This
doesnt appear to have any relevance. None at all. Were
not about litigation in Yugoslavia or events when he was arrested.
Were only interested in what happened in Kosova. Now move
onto another topic.
Turning to the question of Milosevics alleged plan for
ethnic cleansing, Markovic, stated, I have never heard of
such a suggestion. I know of no such plan or design or instruction
to expel Albanians from Kosova.
In fact, Markovic said, the overriding task was to protect
Serb and Albanian civilians and prevent migrations. He told the
court that he had seen many reports that police refused to fire
on civilians even though known Kosova Liberation Army (KLA) fighters
tried to hide amongst convoys of fleeing civilians. Whilst admitting
that there were individual crimes committed by police and army
personnel against civiliansover 400 were prosecutedhe
insisted these were not the result of an organised campaign.
Markovic explained how the exodus from Kosova was a constant
topic at Interior Ministry meetings and insisted there were constant
efforts to reduce it. He said migrations occur in all wars and
that armed KLA rebels and NATO bombs were also responsible for
causing them. He claimed that many Albanian villages had actually
sought the protection of the police from the KLA and that the
current President of Kosova Ibrahim Rugova was himself protected
by Yugoslav forces from KLA death threats.
Markovic also rejected Nices suggestion that the paramilitary
groups had been controlled by Milosevic or the Yugoslav army.
Only those who were physically and psychologically fit were absorbed
into the army, he claimed, and there they were dispersed into
different units to prevent gangs forming.
Milosevic had told Arkan (or Zeljko Raznatovic, head of the
notorious Tigers paramilitary group who was gunned down in Belgrade
in January 2000) to stop the criminal activities that he claimed
were to finance care of the wounded, Markovic continued.
The following exchange occurred:
Milosevic: Did I tell you to tell Arkan that no illegal
activities could be tolerated irrespective even if they were of
a humanitarian nature and that he had to turn to legal operations
only? Is that correct?
Markovic: That was your instruction.
Milosevic: I did not say that he should legalise his
crime [Nice had phrased it this way]. I said that no crime could
be tolerated. He could be involved in legal matters only. Is that
correct?
Markovic: That is correct and that is what I said to
The Hague Tribunal investigators.
Milosevic: They usually twist things to suit themselves.
Thats why I want this to be quite accurate.
Judge May: Thats not a comment thats proper
for you to make.
Milosevic then cross-examined Markovic about the prosecutions
allegations of his ordering a mopping-up exercise
to cover for ethnic cleansing crimes. Markovic denied that mopping-up
meant reburying corpses in order to cover up atrocities as the
prosecution suggested. It referred instead to a standard military
procedure involving the clearance of mines and other explosives,
infrastructure repair and the removal of corpses after a battle.
Markovic said that he had not wanted his men involved in this
activity, which is why he had called it an abomination.
He claimed that he had only heard about the discovery of the lorry
in the Danube when he was in prison and neither he, nor anyone
he knew, had any idea where it had come from.
For a long time the prosecution have complained about the length
of the trial and their inability to produce an insider witness
that would prove Milosevics guilt. Nice had said that cases
like this would be easy to prove in a short time if there were
one member of the accuseds inner circle who was able to
provide a fully accurate and acceptable testimony of everything
that has happened. Markovic was to perform that functiondelivering
the fateful blowbut it backfired.
Despite the ramifications of his evidence for the entire trial,
however, Markovics claims were barely reported in the Western
media.
Not to be deterred, Nice cynically suggested that for the future,
another legal system might be more suitable for the tribunal.
One in which a witness whether they like it or not, would
be hauled before the examining court and interrogated by the examining
judge or by an advocate, accepting the bits that were acceptable
and cross examining as to the balance.
See Also:
The Milosevic Trial: Key prosecution
witness discredited
[3 July 2002]
Behind the Milosevic
trial: the US, Europe and the Balkan catastrophe
[4 July 2001]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |