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Dutch leaders involved in NATO bombing of Yugoslavia testify
at The Hague
By Paul Mitchell
12 February 2004
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The first Western leaders involved in the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia
in 1999 have appeared before The Hague District Court in Holland.
This is the first time since the Second World War that Western
politicians have testified in a national court about their alleged
crimes against humanity.
Wim Kok, former Dutch prime minister and Labour Party (PvdA)
leader and Jozias van Aartsen, former foreign minister gave evidence
at a preliminary hearing at the end of January. Former defence
minister Frank de Grave is set to appear this month, while Jelte
van Nieuwenhoven, former chair of parliament, has so far refused
to appear.
Koks coalition government was in power when NATO bombed
Yugoslavia in 1999, adopting the pretext of stopping the Yugoslav
Army from driving out the majority ethnic Albanian population
from Kosovo. The year before, violence had erupted in the autonomous
province of Kosovo in Serbia, when the Kosovo Liberation Army
took up arms against Serbian rule. Dutch fighter jets took part
in the NATO air strikes that resulted in 500 to 2,500 civilian
deaths.
Two years agoin a case brought by a Dutch organisation,
the Permanent Commission with Respect to Western War Crimesthe
Amsterdam Court of Appeal ruled that the government (and by implication
NATO) should not have used United Nations Security Council Resolution
474 to justify the use of military force against Yugoslavia. The
court concluded that the Dutch state had probably violated international
law by using force.
Shortly after the appeal court judgement the Permanent Commission
initiated a civil damages case on behalf of the relatives of 16
civilians killed in the attack on Radio Television Serbia on April
23, 1999 and the cluster bombing of Nis marketplace on May 7,
1999.
At first The Hague District Court rejected the case, but The
Hague Appeals Court ruled in March 2003 that the four government
leaders had to appear in court to answer the charges.
The four former ministers argued in court that the TV station
was a legitimate target and that the use of cluster bombs was
not prohibited at the time. Kok told the hearing that although
NATO member states had agreed to air strikes against particular
types of targets including communications facilities, the Dutch
government did not have any influence on the choice of individual
targets. He added, The fact that there were civilian
victims is regrettable.... It was due to a technical fault that
the targets were not hit.
Van Aartsen defended the bombing on the basis that NATO spokesmen
had warned several times at a March 1999 press conference that
communication centres including TV stations were considered legitimate
targets. He added that NATO officials had warned the human rights
organisation Amnesty International about a possible attack, but
did not know if they had given any direct warnings to the civilian
population of Serbia.
Undoubtedly, because of its wide international significance,
substantial pressure is being brought to bear on the Dutch authorities
to drop the case against Kok and his associates. Democratic presidential
candidate General Wesley Clark, Supreme Commander of NATO forces
during the bombing campaign, is known to have boasted, for example:
Weve struck at [former Yugoslav President Slobodan
Milosevics] TV stations and transmitters because theyre
as much a part of his military machine prolonging and promoting
this conflict as his army and security forces.
It is, therefore, unlikely that the case against the four ministers
will be allowed to proceed much further. In the past, lawsuits
against NATO have been filed in a number of countries and at the
International Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY), but none
has been successful.
The Dutch state is also trying to prevent legal action against
it for the actions of Dutchbatthe elite Dutch battalion
that served as part of the UN Protection Force in Bosnia when
the massacre at Srebrenica took place in July 1995. It is believed
that Bosnian Serb soldiers commanded by General Ratko Mladic killed
more than 7,000 Bosnian-Muslim men and boys. Central to the case
is the extent of Dutchbats responsibility for the massacre.
At the time, TV stations and newspapers showed pictures of
Dutch Commander Thomas Karremans drinking a toast with Mladic
as his troops supervised the departure of the Bosnian Muslims
from the UN safe zone, and drunken Dutchbat troops celebrating
in Zagreb afterwards.
Hasan Nuhanovic, a former UN employee who watched as Dutch
troops handed his brother and parents over to the Bosnian Serbs,
and a second unnamed plaintiff backed by Zene Srebrenica (the
Women of Srebrenica association) are taking the legal action against
the Dutch state. They accuse Dutchbat of failing to protect over
240 people under their direct supervision in the UN compound.
The plaintiffs lawyer, Liesbeth Zegveld, argues that no
one entered the UN compound where the Dutch battalion were
deployed in 1995. No Serb ever went in. It was the decision of
Dutchbat to send away the people who had sought refuge in the
compound and turn them into the hands of the Serbs.
In November 2003, a Dutch court refused to hear the survivors
testimony, saying it first had to determine if the case was admissible.
Zegveld criticised the courts decision saying, In
99 percent of similar cases the court agrees to hear preliminary
witness [testimony]. The court obviously wasnt inclined
to take this case seriously anyway. Thats the only thing
you can say about it. Zegveld appealed the decision not
to hear the testimony and a ruling is imminent.
The government argued that individuals cannot take legal action
against a state for the actions of its soldiers when they serve
in a UN force. The Dutch governments lawyer Bert-Jan Houtzagers
said, If the state is to be held responsible, this usually
results in obligations towards another state. Not towards civilians.
The Srebrenica massacre led to several investigations by the
Dutch government, parliamentary inquiries and many reports. The
most wide-ranging investigation was commissioned by Koks
government from the Netherlands Institute for War Documentation
(NIOD).
The NIOD report proclaimed Dutchbat not guilty, but the battalion
was blamed along with the international community
and the UN for the massacre. It criticised the troops for supervising
the exodus of refugees, calling it tantamount to collaborating
with ethnic cleansing.
The report points out that the Dutch government originally
wanted to provide the biggest troop contingent in the Balkans
so that Holland could show its worth and Dutch prestige
would be enhanced in the world. The deployment would also
allow sections of the Dutch army to demonstrate the capabilities
of an elite new unit. Instead, Holland played no role at
all in the Dayton agreement that partitioned Bosnia and
was even banned from the conference table.
Whilst the NIOD report did produce some political casualtiesKoks
government resignedthe main result has been to strengthen
the state apparatus.
One such instancethe creation of a new Dutch Foreign
Intelligence Directorate (DIB)was reported by Radio Netherlands
on January 23, which noted it had been largely ignored by
the mainstream Dutch media.
The NIOD report highlighted the lack of foreign intelligence,
particularly about the build-up of Serbian troops around Srebrenica.
Eighteen months before the massacrein January 1994the
government headed by Ruud Lubbers had dissolved the Foreign Intelligence
Service (IDB) after several scandals, including claims of illegal
phone tapping, had appeared in the media.
NIOD complained: The US had the strongest intelligence
position in Bosnia. The Netherlands could have benefited from
this, but lack of interest and the negative attitude of the military
and political leadership stood in the way.
This view was confirmed by Cees Wibies, an intelligence expert
at Amsterdam University, who stated in a Radio Netherlands article,
I think the government realised quite soon that certain
sources had dried up. Information from foreign intelligence services
was no longer available because we did not have a service of our
own any more.
To make matters worse, Hollands imperialist rivals stepped
in to areas the IDB had vacated. Britains MI6 tried to take
over former Dutch networks in several eastern European countries
using former IDB agents. This is believed to have led to the MI6
representative in Holland being told to leave the country in 2000.
Far from providing a means of recompense to the victims of
Srebrenica, as many human rights organisations had hoped, the
NIOD report has resulted in the creation of a new IDB, as well
as increased powers for the domestic spying agencies to intercept
and monitor communications.
See Also:
Dutch government resigns
after critical report on Srebrenica massacre
[19 April 2002]
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