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Subject: Part 1: "Murder at The Hague?"


> International Committee to Defend Slobodan Milosevic
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> ==================================================
> Part 1: Murder At The Hague?  An Investigation Into The Alleged Suicide
> Of Slavko Dokmanovic
> by Professor Francisco J. Gil-White
> [Posted 4 November 2002]
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> This is Part 1 (of 4)
>
> ==================================================
> ** Preface: Is Slobodan Milosevic's Life In Danger? **
>
> Recently, trial proceedings at The Hague were interrupted because of
Slobodan Milosevic's health problems. As reported in the Ottawa Citizen:[1]
>
> [Start Ottawa Citizen Quote]
>
> The war crimes trial of former Serbian leader Slobodan Milosevic was
adjourned yesterday after he complained of exhaustion, prompting fears that
the case may not be finished on time. Mr. Milosevic.has been plagued by
heart and high-blood pressure problems, and suffered several bouts of
influenza.
>
>  [End Ottawa Citizen Quote]
>
> Supporters of Milosevic believe the Hague Tribunal is deliberately trying
to strain Milosevic in the hopes that he will die of a heart attack or
stroke.
>
> They have reason to worry.
>
> This past July, The Hague finally permitted doctors to examine Slobodan
Milosevic. Commenting on the doctor's findings, judge Richard May said:[&]
>
> [Start Quote From Hague Transcript]
>
> JUDGE MAY: ".We have received a report, a medical report, which in its
conclusion describes the accused as a man with severe cardiovascular risk
which demands careful future monitoring. The authors recommend that his
workload be reduced."
>
> [End Quote From Hague Transcript]
>
> However, subsequent to this report, Milosevic's conditions have
deteriorated and his workload has been increased.
>
> Several prisoners at The Hague have died already in suspicious
circumstances. In this piece I consider the details surrounding the dramatic
case of Slavko Dokmanovic, whose death was alleged by the tribunal to be a
suicide. After looking at the evidence, it is almost impossible not to
conclude that Dokmanovic was murdered at The Hague, while in detention, and
that the court authorities are covering it up. This precedent establishes
ample cause for worry about Milosevic's fate.
>
> ** Did  Dokmanovic  Really  Commit  Suicide? **
>
> It was announced on June 29th, 1998, that Slavko Dokmanovic had committed
suicide in his cell, just one week before the tribunal was to pass a verdict
on the charges against him. The Yugoslav government reacted to Dokmanovic's
death as follows:[2]
>
> [Start BBC Quote]
>
> "Bearing in mind the circumstances accompanying the Dokamovic case,
including his arrest, trial, medical treatment and attitude of the prison
authorities towards his health problems, the [Yugoslav] Justice Ministry
considers the tribunal responsible for the death of Dokmanovic.
>
> The ministry expresses its concern for the health of the other war crimes
indictees, and demands that the tribunal undertake necessary steps to
guarantee safety and treatment in keeping with international standards.
>
> In regard with the above, the ministry has lodged a protest by Justice
Minister Zoran Knezevic to the president of the tribunal, Louise Arbour."
>
> [End BBC Quote]
>
> As this analysis will show, the Yugoslav government could, and should
have, leveled charges more serious than these. Had it known the facts,
certainly, it would have.
>
> Consider first that, on the day that Dokmanovic's death was announced, the
Associated Press wrote the following (the emphases are mine):[3]
>
> [Start Associated Press Quote]
>
> ".Dokmanovic had complained through his lawyers of feeling depressed and
had been visited regularly by a psychiatrist, but he never hinted he was
suicidal. In fact, he was seen as having a good chance at acquittal."
>
> [End Associated Press Quote]
>
> A man accused of war crimes (especially if he is innocent!) may naturally
feel distraught and require psychiatric help. Feelings of apprehension may
rise immediately prior to the verdict. But would a man expecting an
acquittal commit suicide?
>
> Every alleged suicide is a possible murder, so if a man with good reason
to live appears to have killed himself, the responsible authorities are
supposed to investigate with zeal -- especially if there are suspicious
circumstances, as was the case for Dokmanovic. About those circumstances,
the same Associated Press wire wrote:
>
> [Back to the Associated Press]
>
> "The body of Slavko Dokmanovic, 48, was found hanging on the hinge of the
door to his cell in the U.N. court's detention unit in The Hague shortly
after midnight, tribunal spokesman Christian Chartier said.
>
> .Chartier said Dokmanovic had complained to guards Sunday afternoon that
he was not feeling well, and he was placed on a suicide watch. The guards
checked on him every half-hour and last saw him alive at 11:30 p.m. Sunday,
he said.
>
> The lights were on in his cell at that time, but shortly thereafter,
Dokmanovic managed to short-circuit the electricity in his cell using an
electric razor, and the lights went out, Chartier said.
>
> When a guard next passed by his cell just after midnight, the body was
found dangling in the darkened cell."
>
> [End Associated Press Quote]
>
> It is difficult to find anything here that makes sense.
>
> First, if the guards last saw him alive at 11:30pm, and didn't check on
him again until midnight, when the body was supposedly found, then how can
Chartier know that Dokmanovic shorted the light in his cell *shortly after
11:30*?
>
> Is he psychic?
>
> Second, if Dokmanovic never even hinted at having suicidal thoughts, why
place him on suicide watch when he merely complains about not "feeling
well"? But if he was placed on suicide watch, how could he hang himself
without anyone noticing and stopping him?
>
> A later wire, from Inter-Press Service, would have us believe that this
was in fact relatively *easy* because Dokmanovic's keepers obliged his
supposedly suicidal intentions by leaving him his tie![4]
>
> [Start Inter-Press Service Quote]
>
> ".Slavko Dokmanovic, a 49-year-old Croatian Serb, hung himself with a tie
.[at the] . detention center in Scheveningen, in the Netherlands, run by the
International Criminal Tribunal for Former Yugoslavia (ICTY)
>
> ..Dokmanovic's death was pronounced 'unfortunate' by the ICTY, although it
was never explained how a man who tried to commit suicide twice while in
detention was left with a tie or an electric razor."
>
> [End Inter-Press Service Quote]
>
> Notice that this is in direct contradiction to what we saw earlier: a man
first described as never even hinting that he was suicidal is now alleged to
have tried to kill himself twice before! Shall we pick our favorite version?
And if Dokmanovic was placed on suicide watch, then it is not merely strange
but downright incomprehensible that they should have left him his tie or
razor.
>
> I contacted the 18th District Philadelphia Police Department to obtain
details about their policies in a suicide watch, and I learned the
following:
>
> 1)    The prisoner is placed in a separate, Plexiglas cell.
>
> 2)    Anything that could be used as a weapon, or used by the prisoner to
hang him/herself is removed. Ties, belts, shoe-laces, etc.-all must go. Only
a safety razor would be provided (certainly not a real razor, or an electric
razor which the prisoner could use to electrocute himself). The prisoner
will be watched at all times while operating the safety razor.
>
> 3)    In Philadelphia, even the prisoner's clothes are removed and s/he is
given a special jumpsuit made of paper that cannot be used for hanging.
>
> 4)    The prisoner is checked every *15 minutes*.
>
> My informant, one Sergeant Walsh, was not sure why the regulation time
between checks is exactly 15 minutes, but he agreed with me that this is
probably so that especially crafty prisoners will not find time enough to
suffocate. Asked how he felt about a 30 minute interval, he reacted with
surprise -- no, that was *much* too long. We've been told, however, that
Slavko Dokmanovic was checked only every 30 minutes.
>
> Sergeant Walsh also impressed upon me that suicide-watch regulations are
not flexible in the least, as failure to follow them to the letter will
result in suspension without pay. And when asked what the procedure would be
in case a prisoner died while on suicide watch, he said: "To give you an
idea of how serious this would be, any time there is a cell block incident
it is investigated by a homicide unit."
>
> Now compare this to what the tribunal spokesman, Christian Chartier, said
to the press and see if you can find anything that looks plausible. One
version has Slavko Dokmanovic on suicide watch even though he never hinted
he was suicidal and merely complained of not feeling well. The other version
has him trying to commit suicide twice before, but he is nevertheless given
long, 30-minute intervals between checks, his clothes are not removed,
and -- most scandalously -- his tie and electric razor are left in his cell!
Why? To give him a better chance on his third try?
>
> We have nothing but suspicious stories here, and all the worse for not
being mutually consistent. But, troubling as these questions may seem, they
pale compared to those raised by glaring inconsistencies in other reports of
the discovery of Dokmanovic's body.
>
> This, for example, is from Deutsche Presse-Agentur:[5]
>
> [Start DPA Quote]
>
> "On Sunday evening, Dokmanovic had again complained about feeling unwell
and was examined by a doctor. He was immediately placed under surveillance
and a guard had checked on his condition every half hour.
>
> At 11.30 pm, everything had been normal, Chartier said. But at midnight
the accused had been found dead.
>
> Chartier was quoted by the British BBC as saying: 'Dokmanovic used an
electric shaver to short-circuit the light in his cell. When the prison
guard went to check on him he could not see in, so he opened the door. That
was when he discovered the body.'"
>
> [Start DPA Quote]
>
> Notice what a different picture we get here. So casual. The guard opened
the door because...he could not see in! There was no particular alarm about
the light being out.
>
> That is consistent with Dokmanovic complaining about not feeling well and
getting checked by "a doctor," not by a psychiatrist. Very casual. Health
problems: routine.
>
> But this contradicts the Associated Press wire cited earlier, which said
that Dokmanovic was seen by a *psychiatrist* and placed on *suicide watch*.
And yet, both reports are from the same day, and both cite the same
Christian Chartier as their source!
>
> The report below, which appeared the next day in The Scotsman, is also
inconsistent:[6]
>
> [Start Scotsman Quote]
>
> "The judges were expected to deliver their verdict on 7 July. After a
visit the next day, his lawyer, Domo Fila, was so disturbed by Dokmanovic's
mental condition that he asked for his client's medication to be increased
and for a warder to check his condition every 30 minutes.
>
> According to Zoran Jovanovic, a legal colleague in Belgrade, Mr Fila had
been confident of securing Dokmanovic's release. 'But he was not at all well
during that time,' said Zoran Jovanovic from Belgrade."
>
> [End Scotsman Quote]
>
> This account has Dokmanovic's lawyer (Toma Fila, not as written above)
worrying about the supposedly suicidal Dokmanovic, and requesting medication
and checks every 30 minutes. The Scotsman's information supposedly comes
from Jovanovic, a colleague of Fila's, not from Chartier.
>
> What are we supposed to believe?
>
> Concern about Dokmanovic was raised either by a psychiatrist, a doctor,
Dokmanovic complaining to his guards, or by his lawyer. Subsequently, either
the prison guards, or his lawyer, decided to either put him on suicide watch
or on informal monitoring. The reason for this was either because of
depression or a health concern, and he was either given medication or not
(but either way they left him his tie and razor even though in one of these
universes he had already attempted to commit suicide twice!). The source for
all of this is mostly one Christian Chartier, who is reported to have said
in one account that Dokmanovic was placed on suicide watch, but in another
(see below), that he was *not* placed on suicide watch! If people are
straightforwardly reporting the facts from mostly *one source* -- one man,
Christian Chartier -- is it possible to get this many different stories in
two days?
>
> Continued in Part 2 (of 4) : http://emperor.vwh.net/icdsm/more/d2.htm
>
> [Footnotes Follow The Appeal]
>
>
> ***************************************
> Please Make a Donation to Defend the Truth
> ***************************************
>
> NATO has The Hague, the mass media and unlimited money. Slobodan Milosevic
has a pay phone, two legal assistants, his supporters around the world, and
the truth.
>
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>
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>
>
> *************
> FOOTNOTES
> *************
>
> [1] Ottawa Citizen,  November 2, 2002 Saturday Final Edition,  News; Pg.
A18,  180 words,  Milosevic's illness delays war crimes trial,  LONDON
>
> [&] Court transcript July 25th, 2002 (p. 8642);
>
> http://www.un.org/icty/transe54/020725ME.htm
>
> [2] BBC Worldwide Monitoring, June 30, 1998
>
> [3] AP Worldstream,  June 29, 1998; Monday,  International news,  670
words,  AP Photo AMS101,  JENIFER CHAO,  THE HAGUE, Netherlands
>
> [4] Inter Press Service,  September 22, 1998, Tuesday,  844 words,
RIGHTS-YUGOSLAVIA: DEATHS IN THE HAGUE "JUSTIFY" BELGRADE STANCE,  By Vesna
Peric-Zimonjic,  BELGRADE, Sep. 22
>
> [5] Deutsche Presse-Agentur,  June 29, 1998, Monday,  International News,
497 words,  Serb war-crimes suspect found hanged in cell days before verdict
due,  The Hague
>
> [6] The Scotsman,  June 30, 1998, Tuesday,  Pg. 9,  601 words,  SERB WAR
CRIMES SUSPECT FOUND HANGED IN CELL,  Alex Blair Foreign Affairs Reporter
>
>
>
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