News and Document archive source
copyrighted material disclaimer at bottom of page

NewsMinecoldwar-imperialismkosovo — Viewing Item


Milosevic possible murder investigated

Original Source Link: (May no longer be active)
   http://today.reuters.com/news/NewsArticle.aspx?type=topNews&storyID=2006-03-12T121912Z_01_LA749012_RTRUKOC_0_US-WARCRIMES-MILOSEVIC.xml

http://today.reuters.com/news/NewsArticle.aspx?type=topNews&storyID=2006-03-12T121912Z_01_LA749012_RTRUKOC_0_US-WARCRIMES-MILOSEVIC.xml

UN tribunal seeks answers on Milosevic death
Sun Mar 12, 2006 7:19 AM ET


By Nicola Leske

THE HAGUE (Reuters) - The UN war crimes tribunal said on Sunday it did not know what killed Slobodan Milosevic but hoped an autopsy would explain the death in his cell of the man branded the "Butcher of the Balkans".

Chief UN war crimes prosecutor Carla del Ponte said the death of the former Yugoslav president made the arrest of Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic and his military commander Ratko Mladic, also accused of genocide, even more pressing.

A Dutch forensic team had not been able to determine the cause of death on Saturday so an autopsy was ordered, UN war crimes tribunal president Fausto Pocar told a news conference.

Del Ponte said she could not rule out suicide but said she wanted to wait for the autopsy, initial results of which she expected later on Sunday.

She noted that Milosevic's death was the second within a week at the tribunal's detention center after the suicide of former rebel Croatian Serb leader Milan Babic.

Milosevic, who suffered from a heart condition and high blood pressure, was found dead in cell on Saturday, only months before a verdict was due in his four-year-old trial.

Relatives of war victims and Balkan politicians said they had been robbed of justice over conflicts that tore Yugoslavia apart in the 1990s.

"Now more than ever I expect Serbia to finally arrest and transfer Ratko Mladic and Radovan Karadzic to the Hague as soon as possible. The death of Slobodan Milosevic makes it even more urgent for them to face justice," Del Ponte told journalists.

"I deeply regret the death of Slobodan Milosevic. It deprives the victims of the justice they need and deserve," she added.

Milosevic's lawyer Zdenko Tomanovic told reporters on Saturday his 64-year-old client had feared he was being poisoned but the tribunal rejected a request for the autopsy to take place in Russia.

Serbia and Montenegro's Minister for Human Rights and Ethnic Minorities, Rasim Ljajic, arrived in the Netherlands on Sunday with two pathologists for the autopsy, his spokeswoman said.

Milosevic's body was taken in a silver hearse from the detention center to a forensic institute on Saturday evening.

HERO'S FUNERAL?

There was no word on when Milosevic's body might be returned to Serbia for burial and no reliable information on when and where the funeral will take place. It was also not clear if his wife Mira Markovic would come to The Hague to collect his body.

"It will be up to the family whether or not they want to publish that kind of information," the tribunal official said.

Mira Markovic made several conjugal visits to the detention center up until 2003, when she fled Serbia for Russia to avoid arrest on charges of abusing her influence in the 1990s.

There was little sign of grief in Serbia, which on Sunday marked the third anniversary of the assassination of Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic, the man who ousted Milosevic.

But the country's opposition Radical Party, the strongest in grassroots support, and Milosevic's rump Socialist Party said the former president should get a national hero's funeral.

Analysts said his death could make the centrist government hesitate over delivering Mladic to The Hague. The European Union has threatened to suspend association talks if he is not arrested in the next four weeks.

Milosevic's death occurred at a difficult time for Serbia with Kosovo poised to win independence and Montenegro also set to vote on a split from Belgrade in a referendum in May.

Milosevic was charged with 66 counts of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes in indictments covering conflicts in Bosnia, Croatia and Kosovo as Yugoslavia imploded.

Denouncing the tribunal as an anti-Serb witchhunt, he declined to enter a plea in Europe's most significant war crimes trial since top Nazis were tried after World War Two.

The tribunal faces questions from those who feel robbed of justice about why the trial had gone on so long compared with the one-year life of Nuremberg after World War Two and the more limited scope of Saddam Hussein's trial in Iraq.

Milosevic's ill-health had repeatedly interrupted his trial. Last month, the court rejected his bid to go to Russia for medical treatment, noting the trial was nearly finished.

The tribunal also faces questions over monitoring of inmates. Normal detention center procedures mean inmates are checked every 30 minutes during the night.

(With additional reporting by Douglas Hamilton in Belgrade)



8k bosnian muslims 1995 massacred in un safe zone { July 12 2005 }
Abolish yugoslavia
Bosnian muslim officers go on trial for war crimes
Cato us role { March 10 1999 }
Court exonerates serbia on 1995 bosnia genocide
Democracy now 10 10 2000 [mp3]
Democracy now 10 10 2000 [wav]
Drug found in milosevic blood
Eights years after massacre 7000 bosnians { October 12 2003 }
Five kla members arrested warcrimes
Former yugoslovia [gif]
Genocide trial doubt { July 26 2002 }
Imf european coup in serbia { October 10 2000 }
Kla opium
Kosovo al Qaeda
Kosovo propoganda coordination { August 28 2000 }
Kosovo psy ops
Kosovo uncertain { September 20 2000 }
Kosovo_1999 [gif]
Lives saved { March 26 2000 }
Many serbs believe srebrenica massacre video is fake
Massacres pretext
Milosevic carried defiance till end { February 2006 }
Milosevic defense { February 18 2002 }
Milosevic possible murder investigated
Milosevic son says father was killed { February 2006 }
Milosevic tirade { February 15 2002 }
Milosevic took drug that made him worse
Milosevic took the wrong drugs { March 13 2006 }
Milosevic war crimes { July 27 2002 }
Milosevic was drugged asked for help
Milosevic within law { July 26 2002 }
Nato sends reinforcements quell kosovo violence 2004
Nato trial { September 19 2000 }
NATO Warcrime { June 11 1999 }
No bodies { October 13 1999 }
No genocide no justification in kosovo
No genocide
No smoking gun { July 27 2002 }
Non prescribed drugs found in milosevic
Overview in yugoslavia { March 28 1999 }
Planning behind march on belgrade { October 15 2000 }
Plight of albanians greatly exaggerated
Poor health of Milosevic delays trial { July 6 2004 }
Ramsey slams hague
Serbia blamed US for kosovo violence { January 2008 }
Serbians protest kosovo independence { February 19 2008 }
Slobodan milosevic found dead in cell { February 2006 }
Suckers for kla { March 26 2000 }
Systematically smashing to pieces modern state { May 31 1999 }
Un kosovo mission examines documents crimes by kla
US aided 1995 Croatian attack on serbs { March 12 2008 }
US demands jeapardise trial { June 11 2002 }
US helped civil war with mujahideen in yugoslovia { March 13 2006 }
War crimes covered { July 24 2002 }
West wants to carve serbia along ethnic lines { March 19 2008 }
Yugoslavia elections { September 27 2000 }

Files Listed: 57



Correction/submissions

CIA FOIA Archive

National Security
Archives
Support one-state solution for Israel and Palestine Tea Party bumper stickers JFK for Dummies, The Assassination made simple