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Yugoslavia: Opposition grows to government collaboration with
war crimes tribunal
By Tony Robson
23 April 2002
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The Belgrade government has rushed through domestic legislation
allowing for closer cooperation with The Hague war crimes tribunal.
This was passed only under duress, as the country, devastated
by NATO bombs and a decade of economic sanctions, was threatened
by a fresh embargo by the United States and the European Union.
Adopted by the Yugoslav Parliament on April 11, the law will
facilitate handing over more defendants to the International Criminal
Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and allow United Nations
court investigators access to Yugoslav and Serb military archives.
The legislation was adopted by the federal parliaments upper
house by 25 votes to 7 and a margin of 80 to 39 in the lower house.
Speaking during the debate, Deputy Prime Minister Miroljub
Labus said the country must swallow its pride even though the
ICTY may be applying selective justice to Serbs. I
agree completely that the law being adopted today is an insult
to our nations dignity, he added.
That this statement was applauded within the chamber is a measure
of the prostration of the Democratic Opposition Serbia (DOS) government
before the major powers. Only hours after its adoption, a serving
MPone of those amongst the priority group the government
voted to extraditeshot himself through the head with a revolver
in front of the federal Parliament building. Vlajko Stojiljkovic
served as Interior Minister during the Kosovo conflict, holding
the post from 1997 until October 2000, when the government of
Slobodan Milosevic was ousted from power. The 64-year-old left
behind a 15-page hand written letter describing his suicide as
a protest against all members of the puppet authorities.
Aside from such nationalist protests by members of the old
regime, the strong-arm tactics being employed by the Western powers
could galvanise broader opposition within Serbia. Surveys conducted
during the initial stages of the ongoing trial of Milosevic at
The Hague show a majority against it.
An opinion poll of 2,200 people conducted by the Strategic
Marketing Agency reported that four fifths of respondents believed
the trial to be biased. Another poll showed that 41.6 per cent
of Serbs gave Milosevic five out of five for his performance.
Large numbers of the population followed the trial proceedings
on television at home and in cafes. Later on, RTS (Serbian-Radio-Television)
decided to pull the plug on live coverage from The Hague. The
state broadcaster claimed that this was due to financial difficulties,
even though ratings were high.
This decision was taken not long after the opening days of
the hearings, during which Milosevic proved to be a capable defendant
and to some extent able to turn the charges of war crimes and
human rights violations back onto the NATO powers.
This was particularly compromising for Serb Prime Minister
Zoran Djindjic, who had played the central role in Milosevics
abduction last year. In an interview published March 3 with Britains
Observer newspaper, Djindjic described the trial as having
low credibility, with witnesses unprepared and
confused. The article continued: So far, said Djindjic,
Milosevics performance in the trial, which began on 12 February,
had proved superior and he now appeared to be playing
the role of prosecutor and not that of defendant. Djindjic complained
that before Milosevics extradition to The Hague tribunal
officials had assured him that they had enough proof of
his personal responsibility and would show this within
days....
In an interview with the German magazine, Der Spiegel,
the previous month, Djindjic was even more critical. He stated:
I am speechless when I see how much money has gone up in
smoke to allow the court to take five years to unearth such insignificant
witnesses.
This circus has left both myself and my government facing
an awkward dilemma. What arguments can I now use to convince other
people to push for greater cooperation with the court?
The Bush administration was not particularly interested in
how Djindjic justified his cooperation, just so long as he did
as he was told. In order for Yugoslavia to qualify for financial
assistance, the US Congress demanded that it fulfill the criteria
for cooperation. A deadline was set for March 31. The demands
for ending the finance for the Bosnian Serb army and releasing
all ethnic Albanian prisoners to the UNs Kosovo Administration
were met. The issue of extraditing further named suspects to The
Hague therefore became the sticking point. As the clock ticked
away, the situation increasingly resembled a hostage siege.
The Western media has attempted to dismiss all opposition to
extradition to The Hague and US and the European Union interference
in Yugoslavian affairs as purely the outpourings of Milosevic
stalwarts or expressions of a people in denial. While
there is no reason to deny the nationalist sentiment that often
animates oppositional sentiment, the western medias stance
only exposes their own disregard for democratic concerns and the
violation of national sovereignty by the major powers.
The ICTY is a political show trial shot through with double
standards. Its apologists boast that the ICTYs broader significance
regarding the universal applicability of human rights is that
a former head of state is being brought to book. No one, therefore,
can be considered above the law. The opposite is the case, however,
and everyone knows it. Not only are the Western powers exempted
from any possible charge of war crimes with regards to Yugoslavia,
but the Bush administration has opposed the setting up of the
permanent International Criminal Court (ICC) as a possible danger
to its own national sovereignty, should there be either any possibility
of US political leaders facing charges or any interference in
Americas own right to try those who are deemed to have endangered
its strategic interests. Its juridical model is not an extension
of the ICTY, but of the military tribunals at Camp X-Ray.
The ICC finally came into existence in April this year, with
66 members of the United Nations having signed a ratification
treaty. The treaty was signed by the Clinton administration, but
was rejected by the US Senate in 1999. The Bush administration
is on the verge of renouncing the treaty and withdrawing the signature
of the US. According to the International Herald Tribune,
the US Congress is even considering legislation that would impose
sanctions on any country that collaborates with the court.
This only throws into sharp relief the bullying and unprincipled
character of US efforts to enforce Yugoslavian cooperation with
The Hague. On April 1, Serbian Minister for Justice Vladan Batic
made an unscheduled appearance on national TV. Batic reminded
the nation that it faced renewed international sanctions. Forty
million dollars of US financial aid was due to be cut off automatically
later that day and Secretary of State Powell had announced that
he would defer submitting his report to the US Congress on whether
the Belgrade regime was cooperating adequately. Powells
say-so was required in order to unblock the $40 million for this
fiscal year.
The Belgrade government signaled its capitulation. Arrest warrants
were issued for four men named by the ICTY as war crimes suspectsSerbian
President Milan Milutinovic, former Deputy Prime Minister Nikola
Sainovic, former Yugoslav Army Chief of Staff Dragoljub Ojdanic
and the now deceased former interior minister.
Batic justified this on the grounds that the country faced
losing foreign investment from other countries, not only the US:
This means that America will vote against (Yugoslavia) in
the IMF, the World Bank, and this would spread to the Paris Club,
admission into the CoE [Council of Europe], the Partnership for
Peace, and European integration.
Pressure to collaborate with the ICTY has been the cause of
friction within the DOS coalition government between Djindjic
and President Vojislav Kostunica. Djindjic was directly responsible
for passing the decree for Milosevics extradition last June,
in defiance of a ruling by the Yugoslav Constitutional Court.
While Djindjic was adamant throughout that further extradition
would take place with or without the passing of domestic legislation,
he was anxious to ensure that Kostunica shared responsibility.
The presidents oppositional stance was more show than
substance. He came to power in a Western backed coup, but his
political reputation was based on his advocacy of a form of Serbian
nationalism essentially no different to that of Milosevic. Indeed
he argued for Milosevics removal from power on the grounds
that this was in the best interests of the Serbian people and
not because of any opposition to the war against Croatian, Bosnian
Muslim and ethnic Albanian separatists.
He went on record as opposing cooperation with The Hague and
insisted that Milosevic stand trial in Yugoslavia. But he too
is abandoning the pretense of opposition. Having told the Yugoslav
media early last month that the ICTY makes his stomach churn,
a week later he informed the Reporter newspaper that while
the thought of the trial made him sick he had in a way,
digested it.
Kostunica and Djindjic were reliant on the former allies of
Milosevic in Montenegro in the Socialist Peoples Party (SNP)
to pass the latest legislation. The SNP switched sides following
Milosevics ouster and have been part of the DOS coalition
ever since.
Underlying the unease of both the prime minister and the president
regarding their open collaboration with the Western powers is
not only the discrediting of the ICTY in the period since last
June, but the mounting opposition to the coalition governments
IMF inspired austerity measures. The last two months have seen
significant strikes and protests involving a cross-section of
the population, from bank workers to miners.
See Also:
The Hague Tribunal: Milosevic
charges NATO with war crimes
A 3-part series
[28 February 2002]
Behind the Milosevic
trial: the US, Europe and the Balkan catastrophe
[4 July 2001]
Serbia faces increased
political and social turmoil
[11 October 2001]
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