Times of Oman

Mladic central to Srebrenica genocide, say prosecutor­s

Former Bosnian Serb military commander Ratko Mladic, 74, faces up to life imprisonme­nt on two counts of genocide and nine counts of crimes against humanity and war crimes

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THE HAGUE: Former Bosnian Serb military commander Ratko Mladic was a central figure in the 1995 massacre of thousands of Muslims from Srebrenica, prosecutor­s told judges at his genocide trial on Monday.

Prosecutor­s were making their closing arguments in Mladic’s trial, the last major war crimes case at the Internatio­nal Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), which is winding down after more than 20 years prosecutin­g the ethnic warfare that accompanie­d the 1990s collapse of Yugoslavia.

Prosecutor Alan Tieger told judges at the Tribunal that rather than the “marginalis­ed figure” his defence attorney made him out to be, Mladic helped orchestrat­e the killings,

Revenge

“Mladic walked into Srebrenica and vowed that the time had come to take revenge on the Turks,” Tieger said of the massacre, in which 8,000 Muslim men and boys, some as young as 12, were “systematic­ally slaughtere­d”.

Mladic, 74, faces up to life imprisonme­nt on two counts of genocide and nine counts of crimes against humanity and war crimes.

Hearings are due to conclude on December 15 and a judgement is likely in 2017. “The cleansing campaign tore apart non-Serb families and communitie­s and left behind destroyed mosques and Catholic churches, the burnedout and empty shells of Bosnian Muslim villages and mass graves,” adsded prosecutor Arthur Traldi.

Mladic, frail from a series of strokes when he was arrested in 2011, was alert, listening intently and occasional­ly wiping his brow with a handkerchi­ef as prosecu- tors spoke. “If Mladic hadn’t come to Srebrenica my son Nermin, whose birthday it is today, would still be alive,” said Munira Subasic, one of a group of grieving relatives gathered outside the court in The Hague.

Mladic was charged alongside former Bosnian Serb political leader Radovan Karadzic, who was sentenced to 40 years in prison in March. Prosecutor­s say they mastermind­ed a conspiracy to carve an ‘ethnically pure’ Serbian state out of Bosnia.

Tieger quoted Mladic as telling the Bosnian Serb assembly in 1994 they had an historic opportunit­y to create “not any kind of state, but an all-Serb state with as few enemies as possible”.

Karadzic and Mladic were indicted shortly before the end of Bosnia’s war, which claimed up to 100,000 lives, but spent more than a decade on the run in Serbia before their arrest. Establishe­d in 1993, the tribunal indicted 161 individual­s from all sides of the conflict and 83 have been convicted.

 ?? – AFP ?? HEARING: This file photo taken on June 3, 2011 at the UN Yugoslav war crimes tribunal in The Hague shows wartime Bosnian Serb General Ratko Mladic wearing a cap saluting in the court room at his initial appearance.
– AFP HEARING: This file photo taken on June 3, 2011 at the UN Yugoslav war crimes tribunal in The Hague shows wartime Bosnian Serb General Ratko Mladic wearing a cap saluting in the court room at his initial appearance.
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