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Ex-Bosnian Serb Leader Enters Guilty Plea to The Hague

October 3, 2002
By MARLISE SIMONS






THE HAGUE, Oct. 2 - A Bosnian Serb leader today became the
first high official to plead guilty of crimes against
humanity and to express remorse publicly for the war and
bloodshed in the Balkans.

The decision by the official, Biljana Plavsic, the former
Bosnian Serb president, opens the door for her potentially
crucial testimony against Slobodan Milosevic, the former
president of Yugoslavia, or other leaders involved in the
1992-95 Bosnian war.

As part of the plea agreement, all other charges against
Mrs. Plavsic, who was not in court for her plea, will be
dropped, including genocide. Immediately after her guilty
plea, her lawyer at the war crimes tribunal in The Hague
said that no deal had been made involving her sentence or
testimony. But under court rules, Mrs. Plavsic can be
compelled to testify.

Eugene O'Sullivan, co-counsel to Mrs. Plavsic, said in a
statement that "by accepting responsibility and expressing
her remorse fully and unconditionally," she hoped to offer
some consolation to the victims of the Bosnian war, Muslim,
Croat and Serb. Many thousands were killed or imprisoned
and uncounted others were driven from their homes. He added
that she understood "that she is subjecting herself to a
possible sentence of life imprisonment."

The unexpected guilty plea compounded the day's exceptional
events at the tribunal. Indeed, it seemed timed to take
advantage of the unusually large presence in The Hague of
reporters and television crews from the former Yugoslavia
to watch the duel of two aging Balkan leaders.

For earlier, in the same courtroom, Mr. Milosevic, the
jailed former Serbian strongman, and Stjepan Mesic, the
current Croatian president, spent the morning sparring.

Today it was Mr. Milosevic's turn to cross-examine Mr.
Mesic, a day after Mr. Mesic testified against Mr.
Milosevic, repeatedly accusing him of blocking all
political solutions and provoking the wars that broke up
Yugoslavia.

Some lawyers said they were impressed by the sight of the
two leaders arguing in an international criminal court, if
only because it had seemed unthinkable until recently. For
a long time, the tribunal created in 1993 to deal with the
Balkan conflicts of the 1990's had only few and low-ranking
defendants on trial.

The Croatian president, a sharp debater, seemed unperturbed
by Mr. Milosevic's relentless questioning. He even
addressed him scathingly as "Mr. Accused."

Mr. Milosevic started off questioning Mr. Mesic about his
time in prison and about political killings in Croatia,
asking him if he had been involved in any of them. Mr.
Mesic replied, "I had as much to do with that as I had with
Lincoln's assassination." Several times, Mr. Milosevic's
questions backfired, allowing Mr. Mesic to add further
possibly detrimental information.

As the old adversaries traded accusations and broadsides,
they often set off laughter in the public gallery, which
was packed with observers from Serbia and Croatia.
Observers can be seen but not heard in the court, which is
shielded with thick bulletproof glass.

The presiding judge, Richard May, often stepped in to bring
Mr. Milosevic, and sometimes both men, back to order. At
one point, after Mr. Mesic told Mr. Milosevic that he was
talking nonsense, Judge May said, "We are not going to
continue in this way."

Then, as the two men quibbled about the inflammatory
writings of a 19th-century Croatian politician, Mr. May
wryly intervened. "The trial chamber is not assisted by the
exchange of abuse," he said, "particularly abuse of 100
years ago."

The judge also warned Mr. Milosevic that he was not using
his time to his advantage by repeatedly straying off the
subject, making speeches and accusing Mr. Mesic of crimes,
rather than questioning his evidence.

"Mr. Milosevic, what you must understand is that attacking
others is not a form of defense," Judge May said. "It is of
no relevance."

As for Mrs. Plavsic, her guilty plea took most court
watchers by surprise.

"Here you have a main player in the war facing the truth,"
Florence Hartmann, spokeswoman for the prosecutor, told
reporters after the plea. "We hope others will accept their
responsibility for the past events. It's the first time a
high-level Serb leader expresses remorse and reaches out to
the victims."

Sentencing hearings for Mrs. Plavsic, a 72-year-old former
professor of biology, will take place in December. She
spoke today by video link from an undisclosed location in
the Balkans, where she is free on provisional release.
Judges informed her today that she could remain at liberty
for security reasons until the December hearings.

Court officials said her guilty plea, apparently proposed
by the prosecution, came after long negotiations by lawyers
on both sides. Seven other defendants have pleaded guilty
before the tribunal, but none of them are as high-ranking
as Mrs. Plavsic.

Her case has been special from the beginning. The only
woman publicly accused by the tribunal of war crimes, she
surrendered to the court in January 2001. At first, she
pleaded not guilty to eight counts of war crimes, including
genocide, related to her role as the vice president of the
Bosnian Serbs during the war. She was close to Radovan
Karadzic, the Bosnian leader, whom she succeeded after the
war.

Both Dr. Karadzic and Gen. Ratko Mladic, the military
leader, have been indicted twice for similar charges by the
tribunal, but they remain at large.

When she surrendered, an official from the prosecutor's
office described her as such a key figure during the Bosnia
war that "there is much that she can tell us, even about
Milosevic."

Prosecutors also hoped that she would provide valuable
information about Momcilo Krajisnik, her co-defendant and
the right-hand man to Dr. Karadzic in the war.

Among lawyers monitoring the court, some looked beyond her
possible role as a future witness.

"It's critically important for someone at such a high level
to say they did wrong," said Judith Armatta, a lawyer and
trial observer for the Coalition for International Justice,
a tribunal support group based in Washington. "There is the
possibility of a snowball effect. And it will help the
truth process in the region."

Ms. Hartmann, the prosecutor's spokeswoman, said she
believed that "expressing remorse is a big step in the
process of reconciliation," adding, "To deny what people
went through is like a second death for victims."

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/10/03/international/europe/03HAGU.html?ex=1034644905&ei=1&en=9eb30bb6ece3d8ab



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